{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0401544":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2021-08-17","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1924-05-10","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0401544\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" Mason Beats\nCHILEAN IN SEVENTH\nSea Pafe 2\nt\npbov iiSftARua\nVIC TOM A   I   C\nqqs\nVol. 22\nNELSON, B. C, SATURDAY MORNING, MAY 10,1924\n\u2014     ' \u2014 \u2014\t\nNelson Woman\nHAS EXTRA RIB\nSee Page 14\nBILL SETS UP A SCOTTISH PARLIAMENT\nTHORNTON SAYS\nCHARGES UNDER\nINVESTIGATION\nFirst Probe Not Satisfying\nSenator, Second One Is\nNow Under Way\nWINNIPEG COUNSEL\nIS INVESTIGATING\nBritish Expert Will\nAid With German Bank\nAdvertised in Coast Papers\nfor Complaints Against\nBoth Services\nMONtRKAL, May 9.\u2014Interviewed\nhere today regarding the speech\nmade In the senate yesterday hy Senator J. D. Taylor, of New Westminster. B.C., Sid Henry Thornton, chairman and presldertt of the Canadian\nNational   railways   said:\nAssistant    Said    Unjustified\n'At various times during the past\ntwo months Senator Taylor has collected and brought to the attention - of the administration, charges\nin regard to some of the officers of\n, the company on the Pacific coast. I\ndelegated a responsible and reliable\nassistant to Investigate these charges,\n80 far as was possible from the examination of papers and correspondence, *wlth titf reailt that, in my Judgment, the charges so made were not\nJustified, and my opinions were com- j\nmunicated  to   Senator Taylor.\nHe,  however,  expressed  dissatisfac- |\ntion,  and in order that  there  mighi j\nhe   removed    the    possibility    of    all;\nv doubt   and  suspicion,   not   only   with I\nrespect  to  the  charges  advanced   by\nSenator  Taylor,  but   with   respect   to\nany other matters relating to the efficiency and good faith of those who\nare   charged   with   tho  administration\nof the company's affairs  on  the  Pacific \u00a3OBSt. I asked B. O. M. Temple.\nthe   company's    regional    counsel    at\nWinnipeg    to   proceed   to   Vancouver\nto   in vest! irate   all   (natters   with   re-\nsuect to Which I have referred  to  in\nthis  interview.     He  is   being  aided   In\nhis   Investigation   by   B.   P.   Haffner.\nIndependent  counsel,  also  from  Winnipeg.\"\nSir  Henry stated   that   notices bid\nbeen   published   in   British   Columbia\nimperii,   asking   that   all   complaints\nshould be sent  t\u00bb Mr. Tempi*1.\nCounftl   Conferred   With   Tsvlor\nMtfCenawuentt-y,    In    view    of    the\nI, above, and the further fact that Mr.\nTemple   Interviewed   Senator   Taylor\ni  prior to the commencement of the investigation   at   New   Westminster,   it\nls   dlfflftiH   t6   understand    why    the\nstatement   is   made   by   Senator   Taylor that he received  no intimation  of\n' the inauiry. and that no public notice\nwaa  given.\n\"The investigation ls  still  proceed-\nIng,     Upon   completion,   the   conelu-\nIons will be made known.\"\nElection Date Is\nStill Unsettled;\nCabinet Not Unit\nVICTORIA. May 9.\u2014Tha best\nbet in political circles tonight,\nwith the cabinet remairdnq mum,\nis either Juna 19 Or 20 for the\n\u2022 leotaon. with the 21st drooped\nowing to the orotaats of Victoria\nLiberals that the visit of the\nBritish battlaahips that dav would\ndisrupt   their   campaign   plans.\nVICTORIA. May 9.\u2014\"Nothing\nabout tha election will be given\nout until tomorrow,\" said Premier\nOliver, following a cabinet inset-\nina this afternoon, lasting two\nhour*.\nIt is learned, however, tha nov-\nernment is not wholly agreed en\nJune 21 and possibly it may be\nchanged.\nBOW8ER~WIN8\nVICTORIA, May 0.\u2014W. J.\nBowser, K.C, has won his point\nin his protest to Premier Oliver\nabout the manner of selecting the\nelection date, claiming the date?\nsuggested miqht not leave t>me\nto   print   the   voters   lists.\nTha premise declared today, the\nlists will be published  tn time.\nHouse Rejects\nje Clause\nAbout Japanese\n81R   ROBERT   KINDER8LEY\nGovernor of the Hudson's Bay com-\npainy, and a director of the Bank\nof   England,   has  hem  named   by  the\nreparations commission to take part\nin organizing the new German Issue\nbank  to  be  set  up  under  the   Dawes\nplan.\nCATHOLIC SAYS\nPOLITICAL VOTE\nUSURPS POWER\nEULER BREAKS\nWITH LIBERALS\nONTHEBUOGET\nKitchener Man Says It Violates the Principles in\nWhich He Believes\nA Third liberal\nBolts on Tariff\nDEPARTS FROM LAST\nYEAR'S CONCEPTION\nAdvocates Scientific Tariff\nBoard; Relief for the\nManufacturers\n_    \u2014    -,     \u201e   ' | celpts.    He would  have been\nIt Is Coolly Proposed to Use \"rtw-^ellt^un oUcetuTw\u00b0\nParliament to Smash Religious Move\nOTTAWA. Mav 9.\u2014TV. D. Euler.\nLiberal. North Waterloo. -ouneed\nin the house of commons todav that\nhe   would   vote   attains!   the   budget.\n\"I would say that I cannot ap-\nprcve Of the more or less haphazard\nchanges which have been made in the\ntariff,\" he said, \"ln summing ud the\nreasons for his decisions. \"Changes\nare made without any accurate knowledge of what thev may Involve. We\nft\u2014 discriminating against certain industries. I do not approve of the\ncondition of uncertainty which the\ncountry is ln for the moment. T can\nsee no verv definite principle underlying the tariff reductlona unless,\nperhaps, this is the first step in the\nImplementing of the 1919 Liberal plat -\nfcrm.\"\nMr. Knler said he wns not an extreme partisan, and therefore he could\nbegin by congratulating the government on thc excellent showing made\nthis year in its balanced budget.\nNo   Tariff   Commission\nHe continued, however, that he\nwas sorry that the government had\nnot ;Heen fit to abolish the \"miisnneo\ntaxes\" on commercial papers and  r>1-\nipts.     He  would   have  been   glad   to\nm three\nlorry\nthat the budget  contained no  modification   of   the   Income   tax,   and   also\nthat   lt   contained   no   announcement\nt   the   appointment   <. f  a   tariff   com-\nEULER,   M.P.\nNorth Waterloo, announced in the\nbudget debate yesterday that he\nwould vote against the budget, because It violated tariff principles in\nwhich he believed. He is from Kitchener, Ont. Other Liberals who have\ntheir intention to vote\nL'Ut in the tariff are W. Q.\nf Brantford and Herbert\nSt.   Lawrence-St.   George,\nannouni ed\nagainst the i\nHsymcnd\nMarler   of\nMontreal.\nSNOWDENSTEELr'-\"r^UaABORIMEr\nSTOPS THRUSTS\nTOWARD CAPITAL\nSocialist   Chancellor  Reassures Wealth by Reversing Himself\nBUDGET IS LIBERAL,\nSAYS LLOYD GEORGE\nMarvelous Old Britain Since\nWar Has Paid AH Her\nPrewar Debt\nBr RT. HON. DAVID LLOYD OEORGE\nCopyright,    1924.    by    United    Feature\nSyndicate. Ineorported; Copyright in\nOreat Britain by London Chronicle;\nExclusive World Bights held by the\nI'nited Feature Syndicate, Incorporated; Reproduction In Whole or In\nPart Prohibited; AU  Rights Reserved.\nTORONTO, May 9. \u2014 \"Canada is mHe\u00b0would also have liked to have\nfaced wub perhaps the moyt momen- at*en some measure of relief for\ntous question which has arisen in her Canadian manufacturers who were\nhistory, nameiv, whether the action required to compete with manufae-\nof religious bodies regarding their hirers operating in countries with\ncreed and organisation is to bo ma<|e depreciated currency.\nthe football of politicians,\" says Party allegiance should be some-\nFather Mlnehan In today's issue cf ] thing anart from tariffs. Mr. Euler\nthe Catholic Register, under the ti<a*4i- believed. *If mv views on. the tariff\nfn*   \u00abrjKh-%ii*   Truth-*\"    \"Union   ami' do--*M>t let-me  call  myself  n   Liberal.\n' my   llfelcng  conception  of  Liberalism\nIng   -\"CathbUa   Truths\nDisunion.\"\n\"Are purely religious issues to be\ndecided by party dickering? Is the\nnutation whether a person shall cr\nshall not be a member if tho Unit?d\nChurch of Canada to be determined\nby whether he sits on the water\nwagon or the beer wagon? Not only\nis the question whether there *hull\nor shall not be a United Chur-h In\nCanada to tie settled bv a political\nvote, but it ls to be settled on points\nwhich have no relations whatever\nto the religious Issues involved,\" con.\ntinned  Father Mmehan.       .\n\"It   may  be   said   that   ftur   provl\nhas been   incorrect.'1\nMr. Euler advocated a tariff board\nmade UP of representatives of all\nclasses. Thev should be able to go\ninto Industries and ascertain the\ncosts and profits of production.\nNot    Likely   to   Be   Only   Case\nThe chief obiection he had to this\nbudget was that it violated prln-\neloles in which he believed, and\nwhich the minister cf finance practically indorsed, In his budget. If\nthe utterances of the members of the\ngovernment bad inven anv assurance\nthat    this   was   an   isolated   and   final\nelal and Dominion legislature in thla|raso of tariff reduction, it would not\nmatter are dealing with issues within \u25a0 be serious. But the acting minister\ntheir own province, namely, inrorpor-1 nf finance had given no such itate-\nIflat,       Quite     true,    but     they    *'an'ment\ndeal with those issues Ii a way I \"j^r au the reasons T have given,\nwhich shall make it impossible for i snftn vote against the budget,\" con-\nreligious    bodies   to   carry   on    their   cli*\"*) Mr   Euler.\nwork. \u2014 -^\t\nNot   Question   of   Safeguards\n\"There in no question of cmmli-\nance with legal safegu irds. The\ncool proposal is to use the civil\npower to smash a purelv re]in;ions\nmovement. Tills is a matter of the\nmost vital concern to all. Is our\nreligious liberty, are our most cherished conscientious convictions, to be\nplaced at the merrv of the lobbyist\nand   the   political   spell-binder?\"\nFather Mlnehan states 'he new\nmovement can be of untold good in\neducational matters. A I'nited Church\nof Canada, embracing the great bulk\nof non-C.'-thnlics. ought to make the\ntask of definite religious school education   miii b   easier,   he   concludes,\nCoolidge\nWASHINGTON. Mav 9.\u2014By a vote\nOf 191 to 171. the house declined\ntoday to approve the Japanese exclusion provision cf the Immigration\nMil Inserted bv house and Henatc\nconferees at the request of President\nCoolidge.\nThe measure was sent back to conference, with the house managers in-'\nstructed to insist on elimination of\nthe provision which would postpone\nthe effective date if exclusion to\nMar^h 1, 19*35. and which would request the president to negotiate with\nJapan fbr abrogation of the \"gentlemen's  agreement.''\nThe Immigration bill, as It was\nfinally agreed to, contains a provision\nunder which any person born in the\nDominion of Canada, and his wife\nor minors accompanying him, nr following him, can enter the United\nStates without restriction. Such persons are ln the non-quota list under\nthe  bill.\nI IS NOT ATTACKING\nGOVERNMENT LINES\nuna tor    Bennett   Says    His   Demand\nfor 'Financial   Inquiry Is  Not sn\nAttack\nOTTAWA,   -May\ny w>\n^^ __^\u2014_\u2014-t_-- -In the senate today lion. \"W. H. Henn\u00abtt referred to his announcement yesterday\nthat he would move for a special\noommlttee of the senate to Inquire\nInto Canadian National railway and\nOovemment Merchant Marine finances and expenditures. tod said no\ndoubt thjs would be taken as an attack on Canada's government -\nowned transportation utilities, but\nsuch   was  not  the intention.\nHe bellfived the Information on band\nJttstKled a thorough Inquiry, and a\nNtoTtftlon to thrit efftct was being\nprepared, snd would be presented to\nthe afiottq Tuesday. May is.\t\nRUSSIAN PRINCESS\nON TRIAL FOR LIFE\nBeautiful Girl Has a Long\nBrigandage Record; Will\nBe Shot if Convicted\nMOSCOW. Mav 9.\u2014The Prinreas\nOhlensky, daughter of Prince Ob-\nlensky. late governor-general of\nPetrograd. and one of the most beautiful girls in Kiissis, was placed on\ntrial   today   charged   with   brigandage.\nIn spite of her 24 years, Soviet\nauthorities sav that she has a long\ncriminal record. A few vears age- she\nwas sentenced to death for espionage,\nbut the sentenc** later was commuted\nto Imprisonment. Subsenuently she\nserved two years tn jail, and after\nher liberation was found guilty for\neight   acts  of  robbery  and   hrigandrv.\nAfter her trial she .Pleaded that she\nwhs not responsible for her acts, hut\nRussian alienists declared her quite\nnormal  mentally.\nIf the indictment is sustained\nngainst the princess at the present\ntrial,  she will  be ordered shct.\nINSANE CRIMINAL\nPUT BEHIND BARS\nVancouver Island Killer Deported to Canada Now\nin Portsmouth Jail\nWINDER. Ont, May \u00bb.\u2014Shuck led\nwith leg- Irons, John Lynn, alias\nSvlvester Ftypn. criminally Insane,\nwhe escaped from the orison asylum\non Vancouver Island In 1921, where\nhe waa nerving a life term for murder, haa tn-.-11 taken to the provincial\npenitentiary at Portsmouth.   Ont.\nLynn was brought ham from Chicago, after he had been picked up by\nthe nuthorltisa while In company with\na number of criminals. He was deported when his identify became\nknewn.\nLvnn was convicted of murder In\nKamloops. B.C, In 1918, and was\ngiven ihe death sentsnee. When\nnsvchiatrfsti -declared tint he **\u2022*\nInsane, the death sentence was cora-\nttuted to UX\u00ab taxiwaawiit.\nONTARIO REPORTS\nTHREE SUICIDES\nTakes  Paris  Green  After\nHoliness Meeting; Farm\nLaborer Hangs Self\nOTTAWA. May 9.\u2014 Numerous fatalities occurred In Ontario during the\npast 24 hours, most of thepi being\nsuicides.\nArchie Do ran took Paris green, with\nfatal results, after a meeting of\nholiness movement workers at his\nheme  at   Meaford.\nJohn Hop'-, aged 35. hutyc himself\nin the barn of bis employer on a\nfarm   pear   Owen   Sound.\nAn unknown Finn, after contemplating suicide by drowning at Cochrane, decided the water was too cold,\nlie later disappeared in the bush with\na rifle. Search parties have been\nunable   to   find   anv  trace of  him.\nFrances A. Monk, aged 46, was\nfatallv Injured when struck on the\nhead by a boom shaft, while working\nin a  quarry   near Kingstcn.\nTbomaH Church 111. aged 82. was\ninstantly killed, and his son William,\naged 40, seriously In lured. In a level\nrailway crossing accident near Clinton.\nHugh Hfll of Auburn. Ont.. who\nwas admitted to hospital vesterdav\nwith n broken neck, died today. Hill.\nan employee of the Canadian Pacific\nrailway, fell from a \"Jigger\" while\nat work.\n***** \u2014i _\nSt. Augustine Fire\nDestroys Convent\nand Four Houses\nQTIKUl-y. May 9. --Four housesand\na convent were destroyed In St. Augustine. Port Neuf county, today hy a\ndisastrous fire which, for a short\ntime. BMW-*d the whHe. town, the\noccupants of nearby residences moving their valuables and anything\nmovable to safety, during the panic\nthnt 'ensued,\nFifty thousand dollars is the ff-gure\nat which damage Is placed.\nThe fh*e started in a small residence, snd. fnnned by a strong wind,\nit   threatened   the   entire   town   within\n30 rnloute*.\nNinety-six children and nine nuns\noccupied the convent, hut all succeeded   In  effecting fhelr  escape.\nSTEAMER ARRIVALS\nSIX YOUNG MEN\nPAWRFEITS\nUPON GALLOWS\nState of Louisiana Upholds\nMajesty of Law Against\nMurder    ^ -   \u00bb   .\nAMI-n-*'\nthree ye;\nbank,    re-\nend  i\nthe\nLa., May 9.\u2014Six men who.\nrs ago, attempted to rob a\nulling in the murder of a\nwent to their deaths at the\nf the hangman's noose todav. in\nTanginahoe parish jail. They\nwere executed in pairs--the aged,\ncmvled htnigman running from the\nimprovised platform immediately after\neach pair had dripped the 10 feet\nto eternity, only to return after their\nbodies bad been cut down to prepare\nthe   noose   for   the   next   pair,\nThe bodies of Andrea Uimantia,\nJoseph (iiglio and Hoy Leon a will be\nshipped to Urooklvn, N.Y.. and Joseph\nKinl's bodj will be taken t<. Chicago\nby his father. Natale I'-amore will\nfind rest ir tin' cemcterv at his\nhome in New Orleans, while Joseph\nHocchio, the friendless boy, who\nwanted to be a priest, will escape\nthe potter's grave through a welfare\norganization which will bring his body\ntu   New  Oleans.\nThree of the men were 21 yeurs\nold when the crime was committed.\nFour left widows and chi'dren. Two\nhad servf.l in the world war with\ntbe   I'nited   States   forces,\nItalian    Pleas    Fail\nThree   were    Italians,    and    the    re-\nmninder   of   Itali.iii    parentage.\nThe Italian Sml lltfOT at Washington pleaded with (-'\u25a0\u25a0\"irnnr Parker\nfor tlie tives of his countrymen, but\nhis plea, as well as those of thousands of Italians, went unheeded. Tile\nmen were hanged on the double gal-\n:tU-miniite Intervals, with\npreriskn,       f*uir       dying\nclock-like\neulmlv.\nOfficials\nfirst   time\nin   the   I-\n'ii\"\nhere said this was Unix men had been ha\"\"\"d\nd   States for  the  murder\nfeerenparia,   at   New    York,    from\nSouthampton.\nIrfviathan,   at\nYorT\nmqdosa,    at\niietatanm.   at  Belfast.\nCarmania,  at  Llverpuul,\nrorfc \t\nW\u00abVIBl\nNew Yo\nMohtrea.\nSouthampton, from\nSouthampton, from\nfrom Mon -\nfrom  New\nBURNS RETIRES\nAS HEAD SLEUTH\nHas Been Under Attack in\nthe United States Senate Investigations\nWASHINGTON. May 9.\u2014 Another\nfigure long under attack in senate\nInvestigations passed from th'1 public\nstage today fn the resignation of William J. Burns as chief of the bureau\nof Investigation of tho department of\njustice.\nA center of criticism leveled nt the\ndepartment since the resignation Of\nHarry M. Daugherty as attorney-\ngeneral. Mr. Burns' retirement was\nequally regarded as certain to folitw\nthat  of his former chief.\nThe suggestion that Mr. Burns\nwaa riuittlng because of criticisms\ndirected at him when Attorney-\nOenenil Duughertv was under fire\nwas laughed away bv the chief, who\nsaid he had twice asked Mr. Daugherty to relieve him and each time\nwad   reouesieil   to  remain.\nEvangelist Price Is\nArrested. Released;\nSanity Questioned\nVICTORIA. May 9.\u2014The fnends\nof Rev. Dr. Price, the evanqelist\nsrroated her\u00a9 J'.odsy for t-namina-\ntion for his sani'v, and released\nwithout any chaff* beina preferred, will meet tomorrow to decide whether or not to institute\na  dsmsr-e action  against  the city.\nIndignant Judge\nReserves Decree\nTill Cools Off\nMay     9,\u2014Mt\n>ry,   \"to   give   iudqm.....   _\u201e\n\u00abm in which  Margaret Leg\nJ \u25a0'Stic*\nive judgment,\" fen\nVANCOUVER,\ntoo   indignant.\", said\nGrtflory,\nths oii^^^^^^^^^\nredey >u\u00abd R. A. Webster for\n$5000 for a bite from his dog*\nchained to an  suto en the street.\n\"I    rsservs    judgment    until    i\ncool   off\/'   said  tb\u00ab   bvnvh.\nBONBON,   May   9   (By  Cable).\u2014As   I\nlistened   to   Philip   Snowden   unfolding\nthe   first   Socialistic   budget   calm   and\nbusinesslike,    dwelling    on    the    Importance     of     maintaining     the     national\ncredit.   I   recalled   debates   on   budgets\nbefore    the    war    when.    In    he    same\nstaccato     and     stabbing     manner     of\nspeech,    he    delivered     fierce     thrusts\n| with    the    pitiless    cold    steel    of    his\noratory   at   the   very   heart   of   capital.\nIn   those   days  he was   oontonipUinus\nof   my  timid  efforts at.   taxing   wealth.\nHe   sketched  out  a   budget   which   then\nlooked   like    the   nightmare    of   a   political    dyspeptic-      By    supertax    and\ndeath   duties   together   be   proposed   to\n'annex    tlie    larger   shnro   of    the    rich\nI man's   possessions.     With  a   B.-beapicr-\n' rean   leer   he   was   fond   of   saying   the\nj rich    should    not    think    of    what    is\ntaken   away   but   of  what   is   still   left\nthem.\nSnowden   nightmare   Beillzed\n'     Those were  the days   of the  shilling\n| income tax and  sixpence supertax.\nToday    the    man    of    large    income\npays   a   tax   of   10   shillings   and   sixpence  in the pound,  and  If he were to\nInsure  ngsinst   the  estate  duties  harely\nfive    shillings    In    the    pound    of    his\nrevenue   would   be   left   for   his   own\nneeds.\nThe Snowden dream has core* true\nand MUl ths affluent \u00abwm to bs; enjoying themselves out of \"what in\nleft\" of their huge incomes. What\nRn infinlfe capacity man posnesses for\nadapting himself to all the vicissitudes\nthat   mav   befall   him!\nThis is true of millionaires, but it\nis  also   true  of  their  sworn   enemies.\nTbe Socialist chancellor of the ex-\ncheouer has quickly adapted himself\nfo his new environment. Mr iltOW-\nAn had to produce a financliTT badfSt\nwhich would please poverty while st\n'he same time it reassured wealth.,\nWith o i nsii inmate        dexterity        he\nachieved these two apparently irre- I\ne<->ncllahle aims. When he mit down\nthe wildest Horlalists In the house !\ngave him such an ovation as they :\nhave not yet accorded to any of\nhis colleagues, and the following m\"rn- \u25a0'\ning British stocks row in thc market\nnfter   financiers   bad   re-id   and   digested j\nbis      budget. A      truly       remarkable i\nachievement    which    reflects    credit   on!\nMr.  Snowden's   adaptlhllity!\nClearest  Bead  ln   Cabinet\nThe   first   Socialist   chancellor   Is   re-I\nputed   to   be   the   clearest   mind   in   the1\ncabinet.      He    is    certainly    the    most]\nlurid   and   logical   speaker  on\"the   front\\\nbench,    and    you    cannot    hsve    clear l\nsneaking   without   clear   thinking.     Mr\nSnowden's    extraordinary    precision    of\nphrase   indicates   a   precise   mind.     He\nhas    none    of    the    ragged    cloudiness\nwhich     mars     the     prime     minister's\nspeeches.       One     gives     you     the     Impression    of   having    worked    out    bis\nsum    in    detail    before    giving    the    result   whilst   the   other   leaves   liis  auditors   an   impression   thai   he   has   been\nthin king   nut   bis   problems   ln   phrases\nThe   budge   speech   was   a    model   of\n1 u ml nous   exposition,   and   it   raises   the\nchancellor    of    the    exchequer    to    the\nposition    of    being    the    one    unqualified   sueeess   of   this   administration\nBut for all that the Socialist budget-\nIs not in the least Socialistic. There\nis riot a panicle or speck of Socialism\nin Its whole composition. It Is all\ndesigned t<> strengthen and not to\nundermine  the existing  system.\nAgainst Capital a Tear Ago\nBarely a year ago Mr. Snowden\nmoved In tlie house of commons a resolution arraigning the capitalist system for its \"failure adequately to\nutilize and organize natural resources and productive power or t\"\nprovide the necessary standard of\nlife for vast numbers of the population, and. believing that the cause\nof this failure lies In private ownership and control of means of production.' he invited the house to declare \"that legislative effort should\nbe directed to gradual suppression of\nthe capitalist system by an inilnsin.il\nand social order based on public ownership and democratic control of the\nInstruments of production and distribution.\"\nHis financial proposals dot not\nwalk \"ne nt. |. in that direction. Then\nIs not a hint of any move toward\nsupervision of the capitalist system.\nIt is just the budget which the Liberal statesmen like Mr. (Bads tone,\nwho was a profound believer in tlie\nexisting order ,.f soclelv, would' ha*. >\u25a0\nIntroduced in the conviction that Ills\nproposals wan giving strong! a and\nsupport to (hat order. Reduction in\nfond taxes, |iro\\i:,ioti for payment oi\ndebt, abolition ol' taxes \u2022 on industry\nand promise of rigid economy have\nall Ihe true iHadstonian touch, and\nthey help to rei\/niielle the worker to\n\"the capitalist system,\" and by tha'\nmeans Its supersession becomes less\nurgent.\nWbHst Socialist members sneer at\nLiberalism as an effecte sham the\none success of their governmant has\nbeen scorer! proposals framed strictly\nIn accordance with the principles and\nprecedents of Liberal statesmanship.\nWhen they cheered their chancellor\nso vociferously at tbe end Of his\nbudget speech they were applauding\nthe triumph of Liberal traditions.\nAnglo-Celt Always Makes Good\nIn calling attention to this fact 1\nam not indulging in party traut. I\nonly wish to call attention to the BOBt\nhopeful characteristic of ths Angb>-\nCeltlo sock wherever It Is to be\nfound, whether fn Oreat Britain, In\nAmsrica or In the British dominions.\nIts \"members can Indulge ln capers of\nphantasy as mad as those which are\ncherished by any other race, but us\nsoon us they ure harnessed with responsibility thsy draw tbe cart ute^d-\niiy and safely along the road,\n(Coiitlnu-ud on  pago  21\nMRS.  ERNEST  INGRAM\nBate widow of Enrico Caruso, the\nwcrld's greatest tenor, finds herself\nunable to live happily with her English husband, whom she married last i\nyear. She alleges Incompatibility of\ntemperament as the ground for her\nseparation.\nBLESSES HOME\nRULE FOR SCOTS\nGives Official Approval to\nPrivate Members Bill for\nthe New Parliament\nLIBERALS ALSO\nSUPPORT SCHEME\nOpposition Members Object\nto Private Bill on Such\na Grave Subject\nSLAYER KNEW\nTHE COTTAGE,\nPOLICE THINK\nWinnipeg Police Hold Many |\nSuspects for Winnipeg's!\nBrutal Murder\nj WINXIPEO, May 9.\u2014Following a\n1 searching Investigation today of the\nmurder of Mrs. Peter Symtchesen\n\u25a0 at her home here Thursday afternoon.\ndetectives from police headquarters\ntonight arrested several additional\nsuspects. Two men were arrested a\nfew hours after the crime, but the\npolice refused to titbit divulge thp\nnames of the sltspecFs, or the number held,  tonight.\nKiller Was Familiar\nWIWII'I'i',, Mav 9. \u2014 Someone\nfamiliar with the habits of the oc-\ncu pants of the neat and un pretentious cottage In the Ruthenian section of the citv is believed to be re-\nsnonslb' \u2022 for the brutal slaving of\nMra Teior Svmtche.sen here yesterday afternoon.\nMrs. Symtch' sen bad heen surprised bv an intruder while sho was\nIn the act of clearing awav the dinner dishes. Her husband and adonted\nm n had departed soon after 1 o'clock,\nand the slaver ls believed to have\nentered the house within a few minutes, stifling his victim before she\nhad   time   to   make   an   outcrv.\nNeighbors did not hear a sound\nduring the whole of the afternoon,\n\u25a0in.l the body was not found Until\nthe voung snn reached home from\nsrlio. !. The woman had heen hound\nand gHgged with a nice of sheeting.\nthe remnants of which covered her\nbody.\nUobberv is baUtved to hive been\nthe motive of the killing, and this\nwith the belief that the perpetrator\nknew of tho household routine, leads\npolice to the tb.nrv that someone\nknown tr the family must hive committed the crime, Thirty dollars had\nbten  takei from a  bureau drawer.\nHICKMAN TAKES\nTHE HELM OF\nNEWFOUNDLAND\nSir Robert Bond Is First\nAsked, but He Declines\nto Reenter Game\nLONDON. May 9.\u2014(By Canadian\nPress Cable.)\u2014In the house of commons todav William Adamson, secretary for Scotland, on behalf of tbe\ngovernment, approved the principle\nof the Scottish home rule bill, which\nprovides for the establishment ln\nScotland of a single chamber parliament of 148 members, while Scotland continues her present representation In the house of commons until\na general devolution scheme Is instituted for the United Kingdom.\nThe Liberals also supported the\nmeasure, which had heen moved by\nOr. Buchanan, Labor, Gorbals, Glasgow.\nTlie Gorbals' member claimed that\nthe Scots had favored the scheme\nalmost unanimously, In order to relieve the congestion of business that\ncame up fn the house of commons.\nOpposition speake-s contended that\nScottish home rule was nof a proper subject for a hill Introduced by a\nprivate member, snd In any caae lt\nwas an   niperlal,  not a  lQflet matter.\nGERMAN ORDER, FOR\nA MILLION  RIFLES\nBritish Firm Said to Have\nBeen Asked to Quote;\nFor Third Country\nPARIS. May 9 -The sr*\u00ab-l-\u00abl Lnn,\ndon oorresporwTent ol tbe Matin saj*\nhe has learned that a (iermsn firm,\nwith headquarters In Hamburg and\nBerlin, asked n well-known British\narms manufacturer, name not given.\nto niinte \u25a0> price on l.MO.OOo rifles\ne.iiilnped with bayonets, and 1.000.-\nOOft.fton cartridges, deliverable at a\nOc-man port.\nAccordfn-: to the text of the request, which the Matin publishes, the\nGerman firm said the arms and the\nammunition w^re meant for a\n\"frienlv government\u2014a member of\nthe entente.\"\nThe correspondent savs the British\nmanufacturer immediately informed\nthe rtrfi\u00abh covernment, and took no\nft^r.^   tn   fill   the   order.\nSOCIALISTS ASK A\nDAWES REFERENDUM\nST. JOHN'S, Nl'ld,. Mav 9. \u2014 At ....\ninvitation of Governor Allardico, Albert B. Hickman, leader of the Liberal partv. has und'-dak'n tu fuiin n>\nministry to summed that -f Hon. W.\nIt. Warn n. wlm resigned office on\nThursdin\nThe    dav    and    one-half    that     has\nelan.se,]     si,\u201ee     tile    fesigliatlotl    of    the f\nWarren     ministry     appears     lo     have |\n1 n    occupied    with    an    attempt    to I\nInduct sir Robert Bond, former prime\nminister, to 1'nrm a *i'-*.v administration. Sir Robert, who has been out\nof the p. Mtical field si! .e his defeat\nat the' polls in 1D13, refused the invitation.\nIt is understood that the majority\nof the executive council, who served\nlimb'! Sir Kichard Squirt's and lion.\nW. It. Wnrreti. will be identified wilh\nPremier   Hickman,\nProminent in the llmiio will bs the\ncabinet ministers who insisted on\nSir Hi'hard Squires' resignation, and\nwho went out of office rather than\nremain with him in tli\" cabinet, after\nHie disclosure, of chnrg- s against him\nlast   vear.\nThe main feature | f the Liberal\nprogram appears to be a cleanup of\ntlie    Mete    of    lhin.*\u00bb alls   lose.I    in    the\nrei ml   Walker InquVy,\nHundred Are Killed\nin a Town-Soldier\nRiot in Mesopotamia\nLONDON. May 9\u2014One hundred townst-eople and six nalivo\nsoldiers wore killed in a serious\ndisturbance at Kirkuk, Mesopotamia, May 4, accord inq to official advices to tho colonial office.\nThe disturbance followed an altercation betwee- the soldiers of\nthe native levy and shopkoep-'rs\nof   the  city.\nClaim    Gcrrim    People    Would    Vote\nOverwhelminofy    m   'Favor   of\nAcceoance\nll KB LIN*. Mav 9.\u2014A popular referendum ' \" '*\u25a0\"' ' '\" \"^ \"*\u25a0' accep-\nlance or rejection of the Dawes\nparatlon i.,-.. i.i be requeued\nof the go ernment by the German\nSoci il st    patty\nIn proposing the referendum, the\n*-*.. ialists as on i that they are moved\nby  the conviction   thnt   last   Sunday'a\ni' \u25a0 hstag elections which resulted in\n' \".ivv L-ains for the candidates of\n\u25a0In- extreme rikjht and left parties.\n\u2022\"tiled   to   reflect   the   actual   state   of\nhe pnbl e mind on what the Roc Ial-\n\u25a0\u25a0*t\u00ab believe the outstanding Issue\nIn Germany us*, the Nationalists and\ni'.imm-itiists and General  Ludendorff h\nl-Yei \u25a0!.'\u25a0 party all waxed fat on\nthe    malcontent    vote.\nThe executive committee of tht*\nSocialist party, which voted today\nin favor id a popular referendum, is\ncom inced that a national refendum\nwould return an overwhelming vote\nin favor of Hilcption of the Dawes\nreport.\nThe organ of the Industrialists. Die\nZ\u00abJt which is close to Foreign Minister Stresemann. declares that a\nre|.'j. teinm would be unsuitable to\ndecide the Issue, which should be\nleft  to the new reichstag.\nDisbarred Lawyer\nLoses Extradition;\nMust Go to Coast\nVANCOUVER, May 9. -loosing his\nappeal against extradition. George\nZimmerman, former G. T. I*, corporation counsel here, and formerly husband of Larbara Oast let on, movie\nstar, must return here for a trial\n(or  forgery.\nZin.merman was disbarred from\npractising here, and lost his gown.\nHe lumped his bail, and went to\nLis Angeles, was arrested there for\nthe Vancouver police and appealed\nfrom c\\ trad It ion Me has now lost\nhi--   appeal,   and   is   sought,\nlie j* known everywhere In rail-\nwa\\   circles as a clevt r lawyer.\nTfce Weather\nEDMONTON*. May J -<Jrase and\nbush fires, funned by stnng winds,\nthreatened seriously, on thu outskirts\nof the city today. Thirteen \u00bbrass and\nbush fires broke out all, however\nbeing placed under control before as\nsuaiitis' dangerous aspects.\nThe tampers euros below are for ths\nH hotirn ending yeiterdaj afternoon\nst   6   o'clock.\nTbe water in tbe West Anil stootl\nat t I feet above low water mark\nyesterday afternoon at Ti o'clock, ac-\noui-dim* lo the uuagf \u201ef the Nelson\nLaunch club, tills registering a rise\nof   ,3 feet   in   tfca  preceding   24  hours.\nVICTORIA,   May   9.\u2014Generally   feir\nant   warm Mln. Mmt.\nNF.LSON     i9        7t\nVictoria     49 <4\nVam oiiver      50        <\u00ab\nKamloops     4S       84\nItarkerville     3R        -58\nI'rinco   Kit pert    -..    32        R2\nKstew.n           4\u00ab        B2\narand   FoHU    -   39       8*\nKaslo   88 72\nCranbrook     *  27 74\nEdmontm    -  42 6B\nPrince Albeit       g 6H\nCalgary  _..... 3H 68\n\\\\ innipeg  34 5(t\nSsn    Francisco      48 92\nSeattle     \u2014\u00ab_\u201e &2 U\n-*_M\n _-_-_W-_-_-_-_-_-M\nPage Two\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, JATURDAY MORNING, MAY 10,1924\nBRIEFS FROM THE WIRE\nPoincara\nm-.___r-   *a   Vint   London\nM>KbOlC   May   \u00ab.\u2014Premier   Poln-\ncara accept* tbe Invitation of Premier\nMacDonald to visit London on May 20\nto dlacuofl reparation*.\nif**  Murderer*  Electrocuted\nTVIIXE,   Ky\u201e   May   \u00bb.\u2014Three\nm\u00ae\nmurderers  are  electrocuted  here   today.\nSteamer* Break Blockade\nDULUTH,  Minn.,   May  \u00bb.~-The Ice\nblockade at the head of the lakes is\nbroken  by   steamers  this  morning.\nRoaebery'a   Horaa   Wins\nLONDON.  May 9.\u2014The One  Thou-\nHiiii   K'i'nean   nt   Now market   ls__won\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhen Superior Accommodation May Be Obtained\n^ffi\/me.\nGeorge Benwell, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel oi the Interior\nAMERICAN   PLAN RATES  13.50 TO  UM\nRooms with Running Water and Private Baths\nHeadquarters  for  all  Travelling  Men,   Mining  Men,\nLumber Men and Tourists\nSPECIAL SUNDAY  DINNER  $1.00\nTHE    MOST    COMFORTABLE    ROTUNDA    IN    THE    CITV\nHUME\u2014P. P. Rowland. Winnipeg;\nJ. W. Binns. I'. J. Campl).*!. Kaslo;\nH. W. Adam*. Spokane; W. Sonne.\nScuttle; R. I). MarKedle. F. J. Horsey,\nA. Beckett. M Nasmyth, Vancouver;\nP.   J.    Moore,    Calgary;    Mr.   and   Mrs.\n\\v. 1.1.evd. Kelowna; P. J. BpaaonH,\nI, A. Riggs. Vanceeuver; J. A. Hyland,\n\\\\innl|ee-K; A il lle-rlzk-p lf\"f\u2014\nI'a.; M. A. Me'LeLugtir.v, tlreenwoiicl,\nIt .1 Nlcheeison. Vane-ouver; 1,. 1:.\nLloyd and wife. Hall Creen. IZngland;\nJ     W,    H.-set.    Te.rente,.\nfcueciTs Holel\nSteam   Heated   Throughout.\nIn   center  of \"business   elistrlet.\nMining.    Lumber,    Traveling    Men\nand   Family   trade   inviteil.\nA. Lapointe,\nManager.\nSHERBROOKE HOTEL\nNear CP.R.  8tation\ntiutnt  at   Reasonable   Rate*\nH    OUNK,   Proprieter\nQUEENS\u2014S. Corey, Creston; Mrs\nO. Sutherland. Ha lev on: A. Bre inner.\nKalnio; J. A. Rent, Boulder; John K\nBtvmtier, Hamilton; Mr. nnd Mrs. Mar-\ndonald.   Trail;  A.   Lull!,   and  B.   Nonieo.\nSTIRLING HOTEL\n715  Vernon   Street   Eart\nSteam    heated.     Hot    and    cold\nwater.\nWe are here to serve you.\nP.    H.    BUSH,    Prop.\nMADDEN HOTEL\nT.  MADDEN,  Prop.\n-Steam Heated   Room*   bv  the  Day\nWeek  or  Month.\nEve.-y   Consideration   Shown ta\nQuests.\ni -o>    BaKer  and Ward  8U\u201e Nelaon.\ntfcmrim   r   Laller,   Vernon.  J.   M.\nMethod. IV H. McLeod. Chlco, Cat;.;\nJ. Klotyintn, Trail: M. Wntson. Sirdiir,\niv.nald ICcPeaX, Peak'a Landing; M.\nMeQueen, Mike MrCrath, Cre.ilo; .1,\nMcDougal,, James Downey Cranbrook;\nJ. C. Munrow, Vancouver; T, J, Jack-\neon. Slocan City; Miss L. Laller,\nJ.   Laller,   Vernon.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n010 Vernen St.,  Eut.\n'\u25banl>   brick   hotel   ln   city.    Steam\nheated, hot and cold  water.   European  and   American   plan*.\nNKW GKANL>\u2014 Lesley Turer, Salmo;\nT. J. Putter. Newport, Wash.; J. M<-\nJmnald, Vancouver. A. \\\\\"i Joins, A\nW. Fllnton, Victoria; H. 1). Lea, Slocan; J. J: Underwood, Tacoma; W. N\nMorris. Klko; EL Q, Parson, Uuldt-n;\nK.    Oliver,    Trail.\nTHE LAKEVIEW HOTEL\nMra. Mallet ta A Son, Proprietor*.\nNice, warm, comfortable rooma at\nreasonable   ratea.     Open   day   en<*\nnight.\n.orner    Hall   and   Vernon    Street*\n\"laKKVIKW-J.   McVt-igh,   Nakusp,\nNelson's Best Cafes\n313 Baker St.\nTHE GRILL\nTHE PLACE TO  EAT\nJeae Binders, Prop.      Nelaon, B.C,\nROYAL CAFE\nClassic   Restaurant\nRefinement   and   Delicacy   Prevalla\nOPEN DAY AND NIGHT\nLuncheon,   11:30  to  -       IBs\nSpecial  Dinners, 6:30  to  8       He\nWe Specialize ln Chop Suey\nand  Noodlea\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n120    Bakar     Straat,     Nelaon,     B.C.\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\n11:30 to 2:30, Special  Lunch   .. SSo\n1:30 to 8:00 p.m., Suppar   860\nPhona   IM\nOCCIDENTAL   HOTEL\n*. C. TOWNER,   Propriator\nTho  home  of  plenty.\nfifty room\" of eollel  comfort\nWa   aarva  tho  beat   meals   ln   Nelaon\n>oY\nIt'a   the   cook\nRead the *idvertUem\u00abnt\u00ab\nmow h mi- TO SHOT\nTHE L D. CAFE\nrineit-equlpped restaurant ln the\nCity. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.\nSPECIAL\u2014lee cream, soda water\nand hot diinka. Nice, clean, fur-\nOished rooms; hot and cold water.\nWe cater   to  private  partlea.\nby Black, 8 to 1, owned by Lord\nRocebery.\nBERLIN, May 9.\u2014The German Socialist party asks the *\u00bbpvernment\nto hold a referendum on the reparation exports report.\nDetective   Burns   Resigns\nWASHINGTON, May 9.-\u2014William J.\nBurni resigns as chief of the department ol Investigation.\nPotomac   Flood    Drowns   Six\nWASHINGTON.   May   9.\u2014Six   lives\nare   lost   In   a   flood   on   thc   upper\nreaches   of  the  Potomac.\nPremior  on   Home   Bank\nOTTAWA.    Mav    9.\u2014Premier    Kinff\ndMorlbes the visit to him of J. F. SI.\nStewart last August in an effort to\nsave the Home bank. The premier\ndeclined to deposit government money\nIn the hank on account of Its condition.\nCalqary Races Cancelled\nOALGA.KY. May 9. \u2014Owing to the\nban on animals cirmtng from the\nI'nited States, due to the foot and\nmonth disease in ('.ilifnrni.i. Hi.- Turf\nclub must cancel  its  spring  meet.\nFrench    Flier   'Forced    Down\nRAG* \u00bbON,    Hurmn.    Mav    3.--Lieut.\nPellltier   DolMy,   French   aviator   flying to Tokio,   in  forced  down  by engine trouble due to  heat.\nSteamer on Fire\nSends an S.O.S.;\nDamage ls Slight\nBOSTON, Mav 9.\u2014The Merchants\nand Miners liner Ontario* whose call\nI'ni- heli) brought several at miners to\nher side near Ploek island, early tola*\/, docked here this afternoon. The\nON which led to the rail, wan confined to \u25a0 ikzeii bale;- of cotton, and\ntlie* steamer   was   not   damaged.\nCONSTANT HEADACHES\nand\nDIZZINESS\nIt Is hard to struggle along with\ni head that aches and pains all the\nrime, and In nine coses out of ten\n\u25a0he persistent headaches are due to\n\u25a0tome derangement of the stomach,\nliver   or   bowels.\nUndoubtedly the cause must be removed beforo permanent relief may\nbe had.\nH unlock Hlood Hitters removes the\ncause of the headaches, as lt acts\non every organ of the body and\nitrengihens, purifies and regulates\n'he  whole  system.\nMrs. Peter Curran, 27 Morrison\nstreet, Sydney, N.S., writes: '_ have\nheen troubled for the last five years\nwith ton.st.tnt headaches and dizziness. After trying several remedies.\nAhirh 1 found to be of no avail,\nBurdoek Hlood Hitters was recommended   to   me.\n\"P.lUi. did ine a world of good,\nand I cannot praise this remedy\nenough.\"\nManufactured only by The T. Mil-\nburn   Co..    Limited.    Toronto.    Ont.\nPRICES THAT WIN\nno Mu woe kta wiiv\nBY   neeikli.K   ii:.,'   Vir.it\nTO  ii.i   Boas*.\nTHE    more    often    you    Visit\nUS   fer   Men's   anil   Hoys'   Weal\nTHE   Mmi'   Money   Vou   Save,\nWE   will   see   thai   you   il\"\nti.\n\"BtrnCijomto\nJ^^Men Suited      \u00b0\niWJot\nELECTRIC CAFE\n607 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.\nOpen Day and Night\nExcellent Meals, Quick Service. I\nEverything cooked by electricity. !\nLuncheon. 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m., 35c. i\nSupper, 6:00 p.m. to 8 p.m., 35c. \u25a0\nSpecial Sunday Turkey Dinner, f>0o j\nplate. Phone   46a\nSummer Resorts\nWHERE THE  FISHING  IS GOOD\nOUTLET HOTEL\nriHhiiig,  Boating.  B.tthing,  Oolf,\nTennis  Conrts.\nrishlng   Tackle    Supplied.      Grocery\nStore  ln   Connection.\nW. A.  WARD.  Proprietor.\nDay,  $3;  Week,  $17  to  SI3.    Special\nMonthly   Aatee.\nHIS\nLES\nOn Face. Itched and Burned,\nLost a Great Deal of Sleep,\n\" I had pimples on my face lor\nseveral months. They were hard\n\u25a0nd   large, and the skin was sore\nnd red. The itching and burning\nalmost set me crazy at night and I\nlost a great deal of Bleep. The\nbreaking out caused disfigurement.\n\" I tried many different remedies\nbut found no relief.    I almost de.\npaired of hrlp when I tried Cuticura\nSoap and Ointment and in a short\ntime   I   was   completely   healed.\"\nSigned I Miss Annie Fischer, Box\n45, Hatton, Saskatchewan.\nClear the pores of impurities hy\ndaily use of Cuticura Soap and occasional touches of Cuticura Ointment as needed to soften, soothe\n\u25a0nd heal. They are ideal for the\ntoilet, as is also Cuticura Talcum.\nJOHNSON STOPS\nCHILEAN BOXER\nINTHE SEVENTH\nReferee Stops Bout to Save\nGame Romero Further\nPunishment\nIOWAN POUNDS BIG\nFELLOW WITH RIGHT\nLatter Scores Knockdown in\nFifth; Battle Is Furious and Bloody\nNKW YORK, May 9.\u2014Floyd John-\nnon, Iowa heavyweight, knocked out\nQuint fa Romero of Chile In the\nseventh round of a 10-round match\nat Madison Square Garden tonight.\nThe knockout blow came after one\nminute arid  47 seconds of the round.\nIt was one of the most furious and\nbloody   strjiERles  of  the  season.\nThe Chilean, blinded from streams\nof blood that gushed from a cut over\nhis left eye, groped around the ring\nIn the final round ln a plucky effort\nto remain on his feet. The Iowan's\nattack beat Romero's face into a\nred   pulpy   mash.\nWild scenes followed the tennina-\nlioii of the bout. ,\\s Referee Magnolia had apparentl;* counted up to\nnine, the bell sounded, Romero wan\non hiH knees, preparing to rise. Simultaneously with the bell the referee waved both men to their corners.\nStops   in   Midround\nNewspapermen at the arena thought\nIhe Chilean had been saved by the\nhell, and that he would come up\nfor the next  round. *\nA report spread that a member of\nthe Htate commission had ordered tin*'\nbout stopped, anil a technical awarded .Johnson, to save his rival from\nfurther punishment.\nIn the first round .Johnson's virions\nright spun the Chilean around, and\ndunqwd him in a shaken heap. In\nthe second, another driving light\nsent htm sagging Io his knees, and\nthen into a dazed spriwl oi. the\nfloor.\nDrops     in     Fifth\nIn the fifth,   weakened by Johnson's\ncontinued pouiuilng. \\i,- ftroppsd as if\nfrom weakness, after another right\nhand thrust. Each lime he took trie\ncount   of   four.\nRut each time he came bad; fighting, and after the knockout in the\nsecond round, craftily feigning ex-\nliaii''ion, be coaxed Johnson into\nrarelessneHH, and drove wickedly to\nIhe nose for a knockdown, Johnson\nw*ie--i!|i  Jvft+***-'Hr-coiint   o\u00a3-\u00abcie,  .-\nYESTERDAYWAS\nTHE HOTTEST DAY\nTemperature    Is   Seventy-\nnine Degrees at Nelson,\nEigthy-six at Forks\n\u2014-*-\u2014\nVesteidav   was   the   hottest   day   of\ntbe vear thus far ln the Kootenay.\nor   at    b-ast    for    Nelson   and    Grand\nforke,\nIt was 70 degrees here, against 7f>\nths previous I'riilay. and 86 at\nGrand Korku, against 8*> the hot\npi Way   in   Qasstton,\nl-'nr \"kaslo and Cranbrook yesterday\ngot honorable mention for he.it, but\nwas  not up  to thc   Kriday  mentioned.\nKaslo registered 7:: degrees, against\n75 on the earlier date, and Cnm-\nbrouk   74,   against   80   on   the   earlier\nAnother Week-End of\nTelling Bargains\nDRESSES--In Crepes and Taffetas.\nUp-to-date models, of real elegance.\nPrices    *$22.50 and *\"'*27.50\nWhile they last.\nVOILES AND RATINES\u2014In very new\nweaves and extremely good styles.\nGreat values at  $0.5O and Up\nCOATS\u2014In Polo Cloth. Smart models\nfor girls and misses. Today....$11.75\nLonger models, half lined  $14.95\nOur more expensive Coats are\nspecially priced Today.\nSUITS\u2014All-Wool French Tricotines,\nSilk lined, in plain and novelty styles.\nToday ?31.75\nBoyish models, Tweeds, and long tailored models, at Real Bargains.\nHOSIERY\u2014Children's Three - quarter\nSocks, extra heavy.    At  75<*\nSILK HOSE\u2014\"London Lady\"    A 1.25\nSPECIALS in Underwear, Gloves, etc.\nPlace Your Millinery Orders Early\nNelson Dry Goods Co.\nLADIES'  WEAR SPECIALISTS\n\u2014*\nHad Kidney Trouble\nFor About Two Years\nThen   Mr.    Doucett   Used\nDodd's Kidney Pills\nNew     Brunswick     man     had kidney\ncomnlicateon   and   got   relief through\nuserg   Dodd's   Kidney   Pills\nKi'l    Uivi-r    CnessliiK.    XI!.. Meiv    !1\nis Ial).\n\"I'i,i-   aleieiji    two   vear*   1   Buffered\nWilh lilelll,-' Ir.elllilee, (Ikllll'tt-H \"11(1\nll.    lei.,.\u25a0!\u201e\u25a0 s.        1     I , IItl    llll    Uodl    \"f    B\u00abd-\nie'lli\"^ lent thev eliel ll..' nil (fOud. |\nli'iik      lUee      le,,x,.\u201e     ,f     lleillll'B      KIlllll'.V\nI'ills   .niel   nem   I   r.'.l   perfectly   well.\"\nTills   .eeteeleeininl   eeeines   finin   Mr.   .1\nI'eeii.ell.   will-kneiwn   resident   of   this\nTee    eiVeeiel    .Useeis,.    till-    kidney*    IIlUKl\nlie    kept    III   k I   WiirkillK   order,      The\ni.i.ln.eys lire- tlie- se.-ivelikers (if the-\nleeeelv.        Their     Wiefk     Is    to     Utritlll     llll\nIhe linleiiilti.s . ill of the hlood. If\nlleee kielneys ;ne wT'inK the Imimri-\nlies.   the   seeds   of   diseiise,   remain   in\nthe' lell.ee,1. Mil.I WtIiMH Ir.llllllc is\nllOllliet     lee    r.elleiW.       Al    till'   first    KIR!!    (if\nIrmilele   in    l>.e,M's   Kidney   1'lllH.\nAsk ymir in itlit'Oi's if riodd'K Kid-\n1TT\\\u20141'HH J:it^\u00bb .net t he - reeiwei*' Ihiat\nwenlt  or sick  kidneys are_rrylng_*yr.\nSNOWDEN STEEL\nSTOPS THRUSTS\nTOWARD CAPITAL\n(Continued   from   Page   Onp>\n.Mr     Simwii.'.'s    budget    Ih    typically\na   Ifrlttsli   pt-riiTinancc\u2014in   thia   and   In\nothtr rssyscts a\u00ab ereU,\nIn nu respect Is It niorf true to\nBritish tradition than in [tS provision\nfor payment of debt. It adhere**\nstrictly to the policy of debt reduc-\nlon initiated by Austen Chamberlain\nif Ier war and subsequently pursued\nby Sir Robert Home and Mr, Baldwin. It followed their lead without\ndeviation in allocating lu\u00abt year's aur-\nplus   exclusively   to   deft   reduction.\nThe   figures   given   by   the   chancellor on debt reduction are very striking:\nTotal    debt    reduction,    both    external     and     internal,     since     December,   1!U9,   has  been  over   1110.-'\ntOOO.nOO,    practically    the    amount    of\nthe   national   Mn   at   the   outbreak\nof   war.\nBritain Paid Heavleit\nThe answer to theHe questions is to\nbe found ln the very remarkable\nanalysis of the cost of the war to\nthe various ' belligeranta published by\ntbe Hankers' Trust company of New\nYork. (The Interally debt\u2014An Analysis of war and Postwar Public\nFinance, by Harvey E, Flakj.. It\nit > mes to the conclusion \"that tin-\ndirect money burden of the war fell\nheaviest on the British people.\" Reducing the actual cost to *WM dollars'' tt finds that the gross cost\nof the war, per capita, IS Britain\nwas 624.8;*', lo France; 28(^20, to Italy\n12.;,:', to Hi.. I'nited States 17IJ.91 and\nto (iermany 2\\<2.i>l. It is interesting\nto unit' thai both In cash and tn\n\"battle losses'' Ceermatiy suffered more\nlo-avtly       than      even       France-. The\nFrench    battle    deaths    were    !ii31     per\ncent,   the  (ierman  tM.\nWhen Britain points to the magnl-\nt utl-> of be-r financial contribution\nthe answer Is given that she could\nbetter    afford    to    pay    than    any    of\nalii.\nRead the Advertisements\nTHEY LIGHTEN WORK\nBut, in this book, there Is also\ncompulation of the cost of the war\nln proportion to the national Income of the various belllgerant nations. Here also Britain SSWSS\nfirst. The Briilsh percentage is\nK :*2, thi' French -\u00bb.b\\>, the Italian\n11.11, the American 15.60 and the\nlierman   31.68.\nTo the direct cost of the war It\nIs t.iir that there should be added\nthe expenditure' on repairing the devastation caused by the war. But,\ne\\ e-n making full allowance for the\ncost of reparation. Britain is still the\nhem test sufferer, as tar as* the financial burden of the War Is concerned.\nMoreover, being the largest international trader, she- has been tlie' heaviest suffe-rer Insofar as the- effect of j\nthe war on trade and commerce Is\nceeneserne,,.\nBritain Taxing on War Basis\nThe fjgures furnished tm to taxa- j\ntion ure also Instructive. British\ntaxes ate easily the heaviest, They\nwere IrapoRed during the war, and\nhave remained without substantial .\nrelaxation, tei this year. That Is what\naccount a for British surpluses, Brit- \\\nish reduction of debt, and restora-\ntion Ol British credit. Whilst continental budgets, without exception, j\nIttM .shpyvn he-avy deficits, covered,\nby borrowing and printing, the British budget has revealed substantial\nsurpluses for four years. Whilst continental Indebtedness has increased\nyear by year, British debt has steadily diminished, In spite of serious\ndepie-sslon In trade, and great unemployment.\nThis   is   due   entirely   to   the   heroic\nsacrifices   made   by   British   taxpayers\nof all classes.\nThe Snowden budget, whilst remitting taxation to the extent of\n\u00a334.050,000, pounds and \u00a347.943,000\nin a full year, this year provides\n\u00a34,r>.000,000 towards paying off debt.\nThe ree*ent Increase of French taxation, belated as It Is, may compaHs\nIhe same result In restoring French\ncredit\u2014If it succeeds; that Is, If the\nFrench taxpayer does not elude payment.\nPoincare's Bravsst Act\nM. Pol ncare's imposll Ion of\nthese taxe-s. and his foreiug them\nthrough at much hazard on the\neve of the election, is the b'f'VPHt\nepisode ln his career, and, if the\ntuxes are honored in collection,\nwill do more to rehabilitate\nFrance than all the reparation\nexpedielnts that ingenuity can devise.\nIn spite of much truculent criticism\nof the abolition nf the McVmn\nduties, the budget Is popular. It has\n8 little prese-nt for every household,\nrich and noor. The reduction Ii \u00bb*\u00bb*,\nand especially (he eut ln sugar duties,\nwill euidear the chancellor to every\nhousewife. In the middle of the\neighteenth century, the consumption\nof sugar in Britain amounted to\nonlv nne pound per head per annum.\nToday It ha* reached 72 pounds, a\nserious item for the worried domestic\nminister of finance. The reduction\nwill enable her to Invest In other\nnecessaries.\nEven frlendlv critics are dmihtful\nas to the wisdom of having given\nso mu eh a wav this vear, A surplus\ncf \u00a34.000.000 is an in:ii1ri-uMtc margin to meet the inevitable deficit nn\nthc nation's house-building bill, the\ncost of the promised abolition of\nthrift limit on old-age pensions, and\nIt certainly leaves nothing for\nwidows' pensions, which the Labor\ngovernment, as well as the Liberals,\nhave1  undertaken  tn  grant.\nDeficits Next Year?\nThe re-al verdict CH the budget as\na financial proposition wtll be delivered hy next year's budget. If there\nbe a larce deficit next year\u2014and\nthai se'eins Inevitable If the govern-\nernment program materializes\u2014then\nit tines not seem to be sound finance'\nto take off taxes one year in order\nto impose new taxes the following\nvear.\nMr, Snowden Is relying much on\ntrade- improvement, and en economies\nIn public departments. In both re-\nsnerts. It la an optimistic budget.\nIf his anticipations are not realized.\nnext year will probably bring an\nIncrease in death duties and a stlf-\nfeMiing of the supertax. His onlv alternative would be to Buapend the\nsinking fund, I can hardly see Mr.\nBnowo-ra doing that.\nBut an increase in taxes on wealth\nwill not daunt him. The probabiliti-'S\ntherefore are that the morrow of\nthe next budKet will not see the repetition of the spectacle witnessed this\nyear\u2014stocks jumping for Jov over an\nune-xperte'd   reprieve.\nDAVID   LLOYD   GEORGE.\nCHURCH UNION HEARING\nOVER;   COUNSEL  CLOSl\nOTTAWA, Mav fl. -The formdi\nhearing on the church union hill bel\nfore the private bills commutes ofl\nthe house of commons closed thll\nafternoon, with a clash of decltral\nttens over the reported utterancs ol\nDr. Gandlcr regarding the \"greafl\nnational   Protestant    church.\"\nRev.   W.   G.   Brown,    Red   Deer\nwitness   against    thc    bill.    yeaterdaiB\nstated   that   he   hard   heard   Dr.   OanW\ndler. at a   meeting of the union COm*|\nmittee.   say:\n\"This   is   the   beginning   of   a   grssl\nnatlQT'il   Protestant  church.    No  govg\nernment    would    dare    resist    such\nchurch.\"\nJust after finishing the finnl st&t\u00abfl\nment for tho unionists this afternoon\nRev. G. C. Pidgeon. Toronto, handel\nte. the chairman a denial of thia Ut|\nterance   bv   Rev.   Dr.  Oandler.\n'I d.-sire to say.\" aald Dr. Gandlsi\nIn his statement, \"that no such stats|\nmeni was ever  made   bv  me.\"\nAt ones George A. Campbell. K.Cl\nMont re-al, counsel for the opponent!\nnf the bill, stated that Rev. MW\nBrown asked permission to file ftl\naffidavit in regard tn the matts^\nThc   permission   was   granted.\nFRANK ROSE, M.D.\nBEOTAI.    SPECIALIST\nsuccessfully    treated    with!\nC     out  pain  or  cutting,   wlthl\n*\u25a0*       out   going   to   sleep  or  tws|\nJltsl.     No time lost  from buslnesa.\nwrite for fr\u00ab\"s book on rectal dlseajcs.\nwaa Term-well Bid*.. Bpokene     Mela ail]\nPile\n. Stop Auto. Train\nid Seasickness ,\nYANKEE FLIERS\nOFF FOR ATTU\nIsland Is the Westernmost\nof the Aleutian Group;\nNo Word of Martin\nBRBMSRTON, Wash . Mav 9.\u2014-\nThree United States army planes\nflvlng around the globe left Atka\nisland ut 10:10 this morning for Attu\nisland, fi00 miles southwest, according\nto a radio dispatch received at the\nPuget   Sound   nnvv   vard  here,\nMeanwhile no word was received\nhere today concerning Mai. F. I,.\nMartin, missing commander of the\nexpedition.\nAttu Island, tbe next step of the\nfliers.  Is a  w esternmost   Island   of   the\nWHY OPERATE?\nfor AppenAlcltla, Oa.ll Stones, stomach and liver troubles, whan\nHEPATOLA do, s the work with- !\nout pain and no risk of your\nlife nor loss of time. Contain*\nno   poison.     Not   Bold   by   drug-\nMRS. GEO. S. ALMAS\nSole   Manufacturer.\n830 Fourth Ave. S.       Phona 4858\nSaskatoon.\nPrice, 88.50. Parcel Pott, Ma Bstam\nAleutian\nTHE  GUMPS-WHAT'LL  I  DO\nU NI6HT\nLONG MIIS\nW\u00abAMt\\> Vt\n(WON   MA*\u00a9\n.fc.V'OK'C WVU\nliMMMMCfe\nMH   *\\0\n*5tt>\u00bbV\n\u25a0.Ho-we***.\n*0AN\n\\hntcv'hn6\n*VNt>\nMMfttt'S\n*f 01-*. TV-*c\nUT\\*cR OK.\nKCONOUttlDtt\nTROKA\n\\wv-\\cv*)\nN'-eotR\nCov\\t*-\n*^\" V \u00bb)tvt\u00ab. *THOOG'r'-f WOO C0O\\.t>\n1*0  LOMC   t*M   SU1   \\   WW-YZt HOW\nnook vovos wto jvm \/v hoi.\\.ow\nM0CK^I?H-     MR?.   HtvMMWL NK\n|ISS\u00ab\n\/ e  Ht c^R^'fe Tut LENvr unftt *\\t we.\n\/    WOUL-0   MKNJt   WRVTTCM TO  Mt -   H*c   KNOWS\n\\ VmtRC  \\  AIA -     \\    Kviow Ht   \\S    Go\\NC)\nI   MlOUN-s   H^\\N(b   (v 60ot>   TIME    HOT  KN0WIH6\nV   OR CAWN-.    VF   \\   ^^^ ^t^  OR &i_\\\\|ti -\nV      I     CAH'T    *TfcU.   -.-iTTV-e   CHt*ST*eR-   V*T\nN^tNOOtt)  \u00ab\u2022\"**\u00a3\u25a0>\u00bb-.  HvtS M*(MCT\nf Vft\\_V., I>A NOT OOVNOTO CXS AHN \"AORfc -\nVIE \u00bb5NT WORTH A. SIN6CE TEtvR- Vl\\.\nNtVt'R, NEVER SPE^K \"To HIM k&M\u00bb\u00bb - BUT \\T=\n\\ <C>0 GO BIVCK VLt MAKE HI'W tOFFER. *rOR\nPM. \"THE HEMtTACHE'S HE HAS CA\\)SE*d ME-\nME 1\/JftS Ku\\\u00ab)ASs SO feoob *,vn> VON.**) ANl> SO\nTEM*OE*ft>-E(kRTE\\>- \\ W\\*SH HE VHEM) HOVO\n*4K*\u00bb \\ FEEA.- \\ KNOW Ht*b fEEL SORRS\nf0\u00ab   rA\\Z~\nTHICK, SWOLLEN QLANDSj\nthai make a horse Wheere,\nRoar, liave  Thick Wind\nor Choke-down, can   be   ^L\nreduced with tf i\nABSORBINE\nni \u25a0 > other Bunchei or Swelling!. No bl liter)\nno ha!r _onet and hone kept at work. Ecj-I\nlomti al \"i.!\\ ifew drops required at anappii-j\ncation. 11 SO jicr bottle delivered. lHk3lfct<;\nJlSORBINE, JR., the antiseptic liniment lor man]\nkind, reducei Cysts, Wtna, Painful, 5<roU\u00ab1\nVeini and Ulcera. ft 1.25 a bottle at deil-ariol\niclivered,   Book \"Evidence\" Irea.\nV. F, YOUNG. I.t.   4S Urn,.. Bldf., M.H-   '  '* \u2022 -\nIbsorbloe iflJ Abaorbioe. Jr.. ut mtii la -i\"*-'\nFree to Asthma and\nHay Fewer Suftews\nTree Trial of Method That An\"ns\nCan Use Without Discomfort\nor Loss of Time.\nWe have a method for th*? control of * t*>\ntne. .irul wc want ynu to try it at our r* > *-*.\nNo mslirr wln'tlirr your cawliot lotiil -d-\ningor rpcentdevfiopmrnt. whether It la ;\"<\u00bb\u2022\nent bs Chronic Aatlima or Hav Pavel yoa\n\u2022liculd -wild for a free Tiial of our im \"\"*J.\nNo mater In what climate you live, no s-1' US\nwhat your age or occupation, - you ais\ntrouhlrd with An lima of Hay Fevat, OUf\nDirthod ahould relieve you promptly.\nWr npedally want to eend It to tNjr\napparnitlv hoppicaa ceate. where all tori of\nInliaWi, doiuhM, opium praparatluiuL (u< >M,\n\"ptitent imokea.\" etc., have failed. We * ..m\nto show rvervone at our expenaa, the out\nmethod i\u00bbrlrsl|iifd to end all difficult *br \u25a0**!0-\nini,   all   whcMiiig.  and   Sll UlOM t\u00abr iWf\nThia frrt offrr la too Important to na^kc a\n-nfiiuI*- day. Write now and twain i li- nn fl\nat once, nend no money- Simply mall Co it>0 '\nbelow. Do It Today\u2014you even do not .-it\npSMSSSi\nFREt TRIAL COUPON\nFRONTIER ASTHMA CO., Room \u00bbAB\nNiagara and Hudton Sti . Buffalo, N.\nSend tree trial of your method toi  \u201e\n \t\n\u2014\nU\u00b0i3\nTHE NELSON itoY^NEWa-SATtiftDAY MORNING;MAY 10,1921.1\nPagB HUP\nMOVIE'MID\nBy HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR\nCopyright, 1984, by Public Ledger Company.\n,. Gloria King Goes to Hollywood with\ntne idea that she can make good in\nthe movies, but abe finds it is not so\neasy*\nCHAPTER Ml\nThe Eleventh Hour\nf\\ LORIA had made very few friends\n*-* in the film colony. Bhe was reserved and kept very much to herself and most of the extras with\n-whom she had come in contract\nthought her upstage. The truth of the\nmatter was that Gloria was gradually\nbecoming embittered. She had come\nto the conclusion that Hollywood had\npo place for the girl of serious intentions. Since her arrival several\nwinners of beauty contests had arrived in Hollywood, and with financial backing were being pushed to the\ntop. Most of the stars who had\nalready arrived were like Catherine\nCharming and Vera Vamp, beautiful\nand showy, but with no real ability\nto act. However, they were in the\nlimelight, and they had clever press\nrepresentatives, and their salaries\nwere reported to be fabulous.\nwith the men lt was the same, and\nthe best example of thin was Rolf\nTempleton. Templeton had an enormous personal following, and it waa\nrumored that he made $2000 a week.\nGloria had been an extra in one of\nhis pictures Just after she had ar-\n1 tn Hollywood,\nohance to study him while he was on\nrivei\nHollywood,   and   had   had   a\nthe set. He would keep a scene waiting several expensive moments for\nhis appearance, he would insist upon\ntaking time off to smoke a elgaret.\nAnn becausa he was Rolf Templeton\nwith a tremendous fan following, he\nwas spoiled and deferred to as if he\nhad been an eastern potentate.\nThe girls around Gloria had pushed\nand jostled in an effort to pee Templeton act. Murmured remarks drifted   to   her  ears.\n\"Jan't hla hair gorReous?\" I don't\nbelieve he uses a thin* on it either.\nAnd his eyes!  I'm right here to tell\nFORTY STEAMERS'\nyou, if ht looked at me once out of\nthose big gleamers, I'd  swoon.\"\nGloria was frankly disgusted.\nCouldn't thev see that his acting was\nridiculous? \"Why, he did -nothing but\nstrike attitudes' and pose around like\na tailor's dummy. It amused illorta.\ntoo, to see the look of fury in the\nevee of Templeton's leading -woman.\nHe wasn't giving her a thing, he was\ntaking all the closetips anl every big\nscene was his. All she had to do\nwas feed him action, and wear beautiful gowns. She h-idn t a chance to\nact.\nTemDleton set the pace for movie\nmad Hollvwood to follo-v. He dashed\naround town ln a bright green racer.\nHe invited people over to his showy\nwhite stucco palace, ind after a riot\noua evening the nartv would repair\nto the pink marble awlminlng pool\nfor a mldnleht dip, \"Wild stories\nwere told about those parries, nnd\nGloria grew to despise Rolf Templeton for his too obvious Insincerity.\nThe day came when Gloria was\nforced to break hsr Imt $10 bill. She\nwas contemplating taking a Inh In a\ncafeteria in order to pay her room\nrent, when, wonder of wonders, she\nhad a call to appear ns extra In the\nnew Templeton release. Once she\nwould have banked on a chance Mke\nthis aa nerhaps meaninq; fomething\nshe woul<? have tnken fresh hope, but\nIt had come too late, She no longer\nbelieved in the Impossible, her Illusions had been crushed, nnd she reported on lot that morning with her\nreal self bidden under n hnrd difference. She was still determined tn\nseize her chance if It were presented\nto her, hut she knew now thnt it\nwas foolish to expect the impossible.\nIf sjje got a chance ahe would have\nto make it herself nnd she must he\nalert to seize her opportunity. It\nwas with this thniu-ht in mind that\nshe stood in the midst of a crowd of\nextras nnd watched Kendall Manning\nthe director, ns he struggled with the\nwinner of the latest heautv contest.\nThis was a beautiful girl, no one\ncould have denied thnt fact, She was\nvery hlond with chased regular features that remained placid in spite nf\neverything the director could do to\nArouse emotion In her.\nTomorrow\u2014Seizing     an     Opportunity\nBLACKWOOD IS\nCHOSEN HEAD\nOF AUTO CLUB\nMembership Drive to Commence at Once; Money\nfor Direction Signs\nMATTER OF TURNOUTS\nON ROAD IS DISCUSSED\nSuggest Channels for Pedestrians on Baker Street\nCrossings\nHELD UP BY ICE\nSAULT STB. MARIB. Mich.. Mny 9.\n\u2014About i0 steamers are now at anchor above the Soo between Big\nPoint nnd Point aux Pins, awaiting\nclearing of the ice situation in the\nhead of  the lakes.\nSome girls who think they can\nsing ought to patronize a correspondence  school  of  thought.\nSt. Paul's\nPresbyt\nenan\nREV. F. R. G. DREDGE, M.A,\nMinister\nPhon. 301R.     Man,., 315 Silica\nSUNDAY, MAY 11\nMothers' Day\n10:45 a.m. \u2014 Sunday School\nmeets for class enrollment,\nand attenda Morning Service. The C.G.l.T. Bible\nClass will Join with the\nSunday  School.\n11:00 a.m. \u2014 Morning Service.\nThere will be no session of\nSunday School in the afternoon.\nAdult Rlble Class  meetB In\nthe   vestry.\nJ: 45 p.m.\u2014Y. P.     Bible     Class\nmeets in the vestry.\n7: JO p.m. \u2014 Evening     Worship.\nA cordial Invitation Is extended\nto all strangers to attend these\nservices.\nMONDAY\n3:00 p.m.\u2014Regular   meeting   of\nthe   Ladles'   Aid   Society   in\nthe vestry.\n7:00 p.m.\u2014Cubs    meet    in    the\nbasement.\n8:00 p.m.\u2014The    Excelsior    Club\nmeets at  the home of Miss\nOlive  Campbell,   Pine street.\nMembers    will    tnke    street\ncar at Pocle Drug corner at\n7:50  sharp.\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Regular   meeting   of\nthe   Board   of   Managers   in\nthe vestry.\nFRIDAY\n4:15 p.m. \u2014 Sunshine   Mission\nBand.\n6:45 p.m.\u2014C. O. I. T.    meet    ln\nbasement.\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Scouts will meet In\nthe basement.\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Choir   Practice.     F.\nE.   Wheeler,   eholrmester.\nAINSWORTH MINE\nWILL PATER\nEngineer Will Start Crew\non United in Old Kootenay Mining Camp\nWork will be started Immediately\nat Alnsworth on the de-waterlng of\nthe United mine, according to E. J.\nEdward, mining engineer of Spokane,\nwho has passed through the city in\nhis way to the Ainsworth property.\nThe property will be operated by\nthe United Mining company of Spokane, and American capital will be\nused   to   develop   the   property.\nA crew of several men will be put\nto work Immediately on development\nof the property and at present there\nIs from 4000 to 5000 tons of ore In\nsight ready for shipment at any time.\nThe United mine is a high grade\nsilver property. Mr. Edwards was\nin the city last fall in company with\nfi \u25a0 Marsh of Spokane, who has\nbeen instrumental in the renewed\nactivity on  this property.\nPsitor:  \"REV. J.  E. TYNER\nResidence:    316    Robson    Street\nMOTHERS' DAY\nThe  Pastor will  preach at both\nservices.\nMorning Service at 11:00.\nSunday School and Bible Classes\nat 2:10.\nEvening   Service   at   7:30.\nThe Ancient Order of Foresters\nwill   attend   the   evening   service\nIn a body.\nWEDNE8DAY     EVENING,     at\n7:30,     a     Special     Gat-Together\nMeeting w.ll  be held.    AM  members   of   tho   Church    and   Con-\npr-egatior*   are   urged   to   attend.\nThursday     Evening,    at    8:00\u2014\nPrayer  Meeting.\nFriday   Evening,   at   7:00\u2014\nB.Y.P.U.\nFirst English Lutheran\nChurch of Nelson\nService.\n\u2022\u00ab\nRetreat\non\nHill,\n7:10\np.m.\nText.\nroh.,\nxvl.\n6-l\u00ab,\nThf\nWork  of\nthe\nHoly\nBplrll\nSunday\nBene\nol at   Shirl.y\nHall,\n10:00\nam.\nAl    Bl.wett\n\u2014 Hunday    School,\nI p.m\nt>l\n\u2022Inn   Hitv\nfen.\n3 p.m.\nCome*\nand\nworship\nwith\nua.\nCARL\nC.\nJANZOW\nP.\ntor.\nL.\nTrinity Methodist\nChurch\nMiniat.r:    REV.   JOHN    H.\nWRIGHT,  B.A.\nRatidancat 709 Josephine Stre.t.\nPhon.   109\nSUNDAY, MAY llth\nMothers' Day\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday school\nand  morning  service.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening service.\nRev.  R.  Stedman,  New\nDenver,   will   preach   at\nboth morning and evening\nservice.\nA drive for members will be started at once by the Nelson and District\nAutomobile cluh. This decision was\nreached at the annual meeting which\nwas held yesterday afternoon In the\nHume hotel.\nThe money derived from memberships will go toward the erection of\nsigns In the district for the direction\nof tourists and autoists ln general,\nas well as for warning signs for dangerous places. A Bum of1 $75 was\nvoted toward the Nelson Publicity\ncommittee for the Issuing of road\nmaps, literature and stickers for tourists visiting the city and district, ln\nconnection with the posting of road-\nsigns throughout the district, the\nclub proposes to place the mileage\nfrom various points on the post such\nfor instance us, \"Nelson. 10 miles.\"\nOn the reverse side of the post would\nthen be placed, for instance. \"Trail,\n36 miles.\" the idea being to serve\nboth motorists coming and going\nfrom   the   city.\nBlackwood   President\nC. D. Blackwood was named as\npresident for the year, and the other\nofficers as named were: Honorary\npresident, Kenneth Campbell; honorary vice-president, Mayor T,. H,\nChoquette; vice-president, It. D.\nTlarnes; secret;irv-treasurer. A. T.\nWalley.\nThe president, vice-president and\nsecretary were named to choose an\nadvisory executive committee consisting of five members, and also an advisory committee to be made up of\nmembers   in   outside   districts.\nln order to combat the jay-walking\non Raker street, which has been the\ncause of several accidents this year,\nthe club will write to the city council suggesting the placing of traffic channels for pedestrians on the\nmain Raker street corners. White\nlines marking out the pedestrians'\nterritory would greatly assist ln the\nelimination  of this danger.\nThe matter of turnouts between\nSalmo and Ymir on that old portion\nof the road was brought up by Harold\nIjakes, and the secretary was instructed to confer with William K.\nRamsey, district engineer, on this\nmatter.\nThe polo industry and hauling of\npoles along the Salmo and Sheep\ncreek roads was also discussed, and\nit was recommended that the speed\nof the trucks carrying poles be regulated and as far as possible, the\nschedule of frequency of these trucks,\nhauling along the road be also requested. This matter will also be\nbrought before thedistrlct engineer\nCONSERVATIVES\nWill NOMINATE\nON WEDNESDAY\nCreston Also Will Choose a\nCandidate for Forthcoming Election Campaign\nNext Wednesday will se<*> the Conservative convention at which a candidate to contest the Nelson riding In\nthe coining elections will bo nominated.\nCreston Conservatives will also\nnominate on that dute.\nW. J. Bowser, lender of tb\" opposition, will be in the citv and will\naddress a public meeting. on May\nIL the dav following the   ^inventions.\nIt has been decided by tbe Conservative association that the convention\nshall he open to all Conservatives,\nwhether members of the association\nor not. and that no membership fee\nwill he collected. This plan has been\ncarried out by the Conservatives in\nNelson for some years, the Idea being to ensure that nothing should\nstand In the wav of anv supporter of\nthe Mtte attending the convention\nnnd taking part in the choice of a\ncandidate.\nScandinavian\nLutheran Church\nSunday   School   nt   10   o'clock.\nServices     in     Scandinavian     at\n11   o'clock.\nEveryone cordially Invited.\nA. B. BERfcH, Pastor.\nDODO'S   v\nKIDNEY |\nfc. PILLS 4\n'i.sitit*- Jr\\t\ninUKrtWINd\nDAMAGES IN\nMANKIN SUIT\nJudge Gives Him Eighteen\nHundred Dollars;Neither\nParty Guilty\nA verdict for the plaintiff, to the\namount of tl*0\u00bb was found bv Mr.\nJustice 1> A. MacDonald in the supreme oourt yesterday In the case\nof D. A. Thorpe vs. the Mankin\nLumber A, Pole company. Thorpe\nwas suing for $5894.41, made up of\ndamages for loss of profits on thousands of feet of logs, and for damages which Included wages, equipment and installation, also loss of\nprofit frorp 5000 feet of white pine\nlumber, the mill being near Hall, on\nthe Oreat Northern, south of Nelson.\nIn giving the verdict Mr. Justice\nMacDonald said he did not think\neither side had been guilty in the\nmatter of the delay, and that he was\nprepared to hold that both had done\nwhat reasonable men would do under\nthe circumstances.\nThe lawyeV for the plaintiff was\nW. Brown, of tho firm of Brown &\nPaw son,\nAgreed to Ignore Contract\nC. Mankin. the first witness yesterday, told of being concerned personally ln drawing un the contract between Thorpe and \"himself. He said\nit did not provide for any particular quantity being cut. He had\nthought It might he possible to get\nstarted on the work about May 14 or\n15. Later he njid Thorpe talking together, hail decided that the mill\ncould not cut as much as 20.000 a\nday. and spoke of drawing a new contract, then decided to make the best\nof It. and more or less ignore the\ncontract.\nThe Judge said that this evidence\nwas not admlssable, as no attempt\nwas being made by the witness' lawyer to have the contract set aside.\nMr. O'Shea. K.C, of the firm of\nO'Shea & Irving, for th*e companjy,\nsaid it was a question of ambiguity\nin the contract. It might be taken\nto mean that the amount to be sawn\nwas 7,500,000 feet if Mankin Lumher\n& Pole company supplied the logs\nfor that amount, or that the amount\nto be sawn was 2,500.000 feet, and\nthat Mankin was to supply the logs.\nRoad Conditions Caused Delay\nMankin said it had not been possible to get the boiler up to the mill\nsite very early in tho year. An at\ntempt was made in March, and hf\noAUmi of th* condition if \"he toa\nt \u00bb\u00bb boiler was upset. _atar when\nV.-.o snow had gone thi boiler was\ntaken to Clenrwatcr Spur ab\u00bb:t April\n;.\">, and YbciDe torn it \\:r> from there\n\u00bb!ci    yta\\  \\.\n'i be mill should have he-n instructed about May 1. he said Thotpe\nhad set it up more elabruately than\nthe    witness    had    expected.\nThe company had some thin.? over\n300.000 feet of lass jacked up along\nthe flume on a skldway at this time,\nhe said.\nThe flume runs nearlv 14 miles\nabove the mil', the witness tald. Ht\nJudged the average capacity of the\nmill would be somewhere about\n15.000   feet.\n\"I do not think any mill man\nwould expect it to do 20,000 a day,\"\nhe   said.\nMankin had had experience In running small mills, he said, of the\nsame make as the one in question.\nbut larger. \"We always figure that\nif we get in 20 days a month on a\nmill, we are getting a good month's\nrun.\"   he  said.\nThere hnd been a good supply of\nlogs through July, he said. The first\nshortage cjyne on August 7 or 8,\nthrough shortage of water and trouble\nWith a sktdway. Powell's reports\nshowed that there had been something\nover 600.000 feet   sawn   hy  Thorpe\nHe said there were ahout 300,000\nlogs still at the Clearwater timber\nlimit, and that there was a little\nover 200,000 cut and skidded and in\nthe  pond.\nUnder cross-examination by Mr.\nBrown, the wltlness said the timber limit was about four miles in\nlength, hut that above the head of\nthe flume there was no white pine,\nonly  hemlock  and  spruce.\nDenies    Gave    Pine    Figure\nHe    was    asked    If    he    had    told\nThorpe    that    there    would    not    be\n2,500,000 .feet    on   nine   on   the   limit.\nand answered  in  the  negative.\nOtis Hawkins, secretary and treasurer of the lumber company, the next\nwitness, .said tbe mill was a \"pickup\" one, and th.it the parts did not\nbalance. He would consider 20 or 22\ndavs a month a  fair average for it.\nThe Powell match companv had\nreported that 633,00(1 feet of match\nlumher had been provided. Thorpe\niiIho cut, in '\u2022\u25a0addition to this amount.\nIS,000   feet   for   tho company.\nO. S. Hardy, who had a contract\nwith Mankin to move machinery\nfrom Hall up to the mill site also\ngave evidence, as did J, O'Toole.\nwho had helped him, which confirmed that already given, ahout the\ndelav In building, and the capacity\nof   the   mill.\nC. R. Severns. the Ijirdo operator,\ntold of seeing the mill in question\nlast week. He thought that 20 days I\nmonth would be n good average for\nrunning  time  for the  mill.\nPeter Uenjn. the next witness, w,is\na Russian tor whom Max Raskin acted as Interpretor. He had worked at\ntbe mill last summer, and said he\nhad not seen It idle while he was\nthere.\nJ. W. Sherbinin was called, nnd\ntold of dismantling the shingle mill\nfrom whlcn seme of the equipment for\nThorpe's  mill   had   come.\nIra Tomburn was called nnd told\nof working for Th i.-ne as edgTin.in.\nJohn Stl>enls was the last witness,\nand told of seeing large quant die*\nof white nine on-the Clearwater limit  recently.\nJUNIOR GIRLS\nDRILL DAINTILY\nRecent Exhibition by Mrs.\nWright's Gym Class Is\na Revelation\nA recent exhibition by Mrs. Guy\nWright's Junior gymnasium class, at\nthe Recreation club, was a huge\nsuccess. It waa the first of Its kind\never held In N'elson by the junior\ngirls, and was applauded by a large\nattendance.\nThe program opened with maze\nmarching,'which was a pretty sight,\nwith the girls In their white middies\nwith navy collars and bloomers,\nwhite stockings, block shoes, and\nties.\nCalisthenics came next, and the\nmany exercises were also done exquisitely.\nThe tumbling particularly was an\naccomplishment, difficult stunts being performed bv five voung girls\nand Mrs. Wright, the Misses Carol\nWright, Alma Smlllle, Margaret Hip-\nperson, Florence Grant and Evelyn\nWallace being the clever little tumblers.\nThe wand, dumb-bell and cluh\nswinging drills were all very well\ndone, and were very prettv to watch,\nthe wands being decorated In the\ncluh's colors, which are purple nnd\nwhite and the clubs were circled with\npink   paper   roses.\nThe horse nnd the parallel bars\nwere the scenes of many exercises\nperformed   on   them.\nSeveral pyramids were also corrt-\nposed, \u2022\nSeveral musical numbers were rendered. A piano duet by Carol and\nRleonor Wright was pleaslnt: Anna*\nbelle Dunk played and sang Mendcis-\nLutheran Services\nRecreation Hall\nServices  In  Scandinavian\nat   11  o'clock.\nSunday School at 10 o'clock.\nA. B. BEROH,\nPastor.\nThe Salvation Army\n613   VICTORIA   STREET\nCAPT.  CAPON   ind   LT.   DOVE\nSUNDAY   SERVICES\n7: SO a.m.\u2014Knee   Prill.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holiness  Meeting.\n3:00 p.m.\u2014Sundiiy   School   and\nHlble   Class.\n7: JO p.m.\u2014Salvation   Meeting.\nTuesday   and   Thursday,   at   8,\nPublic Meetings.\n\"\u25a0tOBf!\t\nNEW EFFECTS\nIn Bracelets, Earrings and\nHeads. All the latest color\ncombinations.\nWe have received a new\nnhipment of Bluebird and\nDelta Pearls.\nJ. B. GRAY\nJeweler Watchmaker 4 Optlolar\n407 BAKER STREET\n\"Good   Good*   at   Gray's\"\nHAD A WEAK HEART\nWAS VERY NERVOUS\nFOR THREE YEARS\nMiss Jessie Peterson, Zealandla,\nSask., wrlfes: \"I wish to let you\nknow how much good Mllburn's Heart\nind Nerve  PUls have done for me.\n\"For nearly three years I was very\nladly run down, had a weak heart,\nind was so nervous that sometimes I\nwould almost faint away.\n\"I heard of many people who had\nrecommended your Heart and Nerve\nPills, so I decided to give them a\ntrial. After I had used two boxes\n[ found they had done me good, and\nafter having taken five boxes I was\ncompletely relieved.\n\"I cannot recommend your Pills\nenough, and I would advise anyone\nhaving a weak heart or troubled\nwith   nervousness   to   use  them.\"\nMllburn's H. & N. Pills are 50c\na box at all dealers, or mailed direct\nnn receipt of price by The T. Mil-\nhum   Co..   Limited.  Toronto.  Ont.\nsohns* \"Spring Sonf\" very sweetly.\nAlma Smlllle um >JBuk\u00abt of Koeeef*\nvary charmingly tn costume. Prls-\ncllli. Oellnaa and Annabelle Dunk\nplay\u00abd a duet \"Irish Violate\" very\nveil. Carol and Eleanor Wright\ngracefully danced tbe Crinoline dance\nIn dainty blue dresses with hoops\nand pantaloons and old fashioned\nbonnets. They also sang \"Alice Blue\nOoTrn.\"\nThe song, \"Freckles\" by 10 of the\ngirls, made a great hit and brought\nthe house down. Florence Scott being exceptionally good. Ths Maypole\ndance which was the last on the program was also pretty, the pole being\ndecorated in purple and white, with\nstreamers  the  same.\nMrs. William Sutherland was the\npianist for the drills. The whole program was an entire success.\nBAPTIST PASM\nTO REMAIN HERE\nMr. Tyner Accedes to Request to  Reconsider\nHis Decision\nAt the earnest solicitation of the\nmembers and congregation of the\nBaptist church. Rev. J. E. Tyner, has\nconsented to reconsider his decision\nto resign from the pastorate in Nelson.\nMr. Tyner's decision to resign was\nannounced to his connreg.ition last\nSunday, and a meeting was called\nat once lq order to take steps to pur-\n\/~\nNew Wallpaper\nBrightens Homes\nT F YOi'K walls seem dull and\n\u2022 dismal, it's time to repaper.\nCome in today and see our\nlatt-st portfolio of the newest\nroom-brighteninfT designs in\nWallpaper. Don't delay\u2014call\nus today and we'll gladly furnish   an   estimate.\nMURPHY BROS.\nPainters   and   Decorators\nHALL  AND  BAKER  STREETS\nNslson,   B.C.\nanada him\nremain with\natepa, lt If)\nCONVICTED FOR\nSETTING A FIRE\nWITHOUT CARE\nSalmo Man Burned Ninety\nAcres When Fire Got Out\nof Control; Had Only Axe\nFor   Yoor  Summer\nHome   or   General\nEveryday Ute\nHICKORY ARM CHAIRS AND ROCKERS\u2014\nPrices   $9.50 to $14.00\nVERANDA   ARM    CHAIRS    AND    ROCKERS\u2014\nNatural and Red.    Prices ?6.00 to $10.00\nSEAGRASS ARM CHAIRS\u2014At $12.00 to $18.00\nHAMMOCKS\u2014Prices   $7.00 to $13.50\nVERANDA SHADES\u20144 ft., G ft. and 7 ft. wide.\nSTRIPE AWNINGS\u2014Brown, Green, and Rliie and\nWhite.\nStandard Furniture Co.\nComplete House Furnishers\nNELSON, B.C.\nBOARD'\nPROVINCIAL BODY\nIn ytaterday-a taaua o\u00ab tU\nNews   it   waa   stated   In   Um\nof the Nalaon board of trade\nthat the secretary of the JL.\nBoarda of Trade of Eastern\nColumbia had acknowledged\nreclpt of the resignation of the\neon board.\nThe resignation did not. refer to the\nAeaoclated Boarda of Kaatern BtW*h\nColumbia, but was In reference' to tbe\nAssociated Boards ot BrttUh Columbia, whoae headquarters were at Van.\nCMfV^ ni\"!    I'  III it\n^^^^\nBUY ADVERTISED GOODS\n Meat. SyutrChwepui\nH, Oliver of Salmo appeared before Mas 1st rates Held and Mathew of\nt hut \"town on Thursday, on thf chare\"1\nof b.'tvliiK s\u00abt a flr*p without takmn\nproper precautions, on April 2g_ and\nwuh fined $Z;\"i and r<mti\u00ab. The action\nwas brought by tbe provincial forestry   department.\nThe evidence in the rase showed\nthat on April 29 Oliver Mtartt'd out to\neltwr a Iohkhik road with an axe as\nhid onlv tool. This burned up while\nhe \u00abf| nt lunch, po that he was left\nwith iin means of fUhtinR the rapidly\nKrowinR    blaze\nWhen Hi** f'r\"1 was flr\u00abt seen by\nRanker J. T. Price, 80 acres had\nbe*n burned He Immediately started\nIn with a crew of men. and confined\nthe fire, which, however, was not\nfinallv out until May 4. U*y that time\n90  acre*-,  altogether   had   bfen   burned.\n-,\u2014-,   m\nAlmost any one can be a power\nfor erll\u2014but It takes a man among\nmen to be a powtr (or good.\nSAY \"BAYER ASPIRIN\" and INSIST!\nProved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians foi\nHeadache  Colds Neuralgia    Lumbago\nToothache     Neuritis      Rheumatism\nPain\nC\"*\/ \u25a0pQy^' \u00a3\u00ab\u00a3\u00a3! -_1 '____' Parage\n^ fJLf Cr which contains proven directions.\n_     jr^^g Henir \"Bayer\" bone of   12  tablets\n^-\"^ _ Alao bottles of it aad 100\u2014 Dnjfgista.\nmm.9 _> *\"*\u2022 __ (\u25a0\"tl.lsraa l\u00ab CsMls) of Ism atasefseteni or Uaae.\naoatleacltotsr of rsJlclloacM WtU. It la w.ll u.wo '\u201e., lae,,ru Zm hnf\naisssfactsn,   t\u00bb aaaUt   He i\u00bbUlo  asaluat  lialutloua,   Un  x.w,t, of   iaisr^  ^^\n\u00abW te tt\u00bbH.\"a \u2022\"\u25a0 I\"\"*-- W ***, Uie \u2022**-\u2022\u25a0C\n\u25a0ou i\\,\nBriinlulVj!'*\nand Feature;\nMrs.  M.  Lamnwiee,\nBaker Street,\nNelson., B.C.\n1   In Next\nSunday's\nSUN\nFashions Making\nWomen Ugly\nFamous physician explains hov.\" modern ways\nof dress ure ruining both\nhealth and beauty of\nmodern Women. A startling\narticle of absorbing Interest  to every woman.\nHow the Shah\nLost His Throne\nShah cf Pentia li modern Nero. While Persian\nthrone tot t era, pie-mure-\nspekinK ruler dissipates on\ngay Riviera. The vlcea\nof royalty unmasked In\nan unusuolly frank article.\nSaving Our\nWestern Timber\nHow forests on tho\nWestern Coast are protected from being ravished   by  the  fire  demon.\nHow modern science\nused aeroplanes and co\u00abt-\nly Instruments to detect\nnnd  put  out forest  fires.\nStenographer to\nStage Star\nHew beautiful Ann\nHardlnff dodged doiens of\nbeaux and left her type-\nwrifnr to become one of\nRroad way's most sclntll-\ntatfng  ornaments.\nThe Intimate story of\nthin famous young actress\n.revealed for the first\ntime.\nFarnol Praises\nWestern Girls\nJeffery Farnol, celebrated Ilritlsh Author and\nfamous     Btanry     critic,\nraves over independence\nand beauty of New Wcrld\ngirls.\n\"I take off my hat to\nAmerican and Canadian\ngirls every time and In\nevery place I see them\u2014\nI am amused\u2014amaied because of their frankness,\nnaturalness and simplicity,\"  said  Farnol.\nHead his fascinating ar-\nticle in Sunday's Sun.\nEverything\nWomen Like\nlatest news and notes\nof the -world of fashion;\nnew recipes and appetising menus for the week,\nbeauty chats and household hints in abundance,\nare  included  In  next Sun-\n(Iuv'k    Sun.\nDon't\nmlaa\nth*\u00bbm.\nThe Canadian\nPublic School\n\"Tho public school Is\nthe hope of the future;\nin it the leaders of the\nfuture are being reared\ntoday,\" says a smashing\nfull-page illustrated edl-\nt< rial \"ii the influence of\npublic .school on the development and progress\nof the Dominion.\nEight Pages\nof Comics\nThe kiddies think Sunday Sun funnies are simply wonderful. There are\nX patces of them every\nSin'day. Including the\n(lumps and CJaaollne *\nAlley. 4\nOrder the\nNOW\n\u25a0j' j \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*\n \t\n~\\ i^ige f o<\u00a3\n' T3E' I7EIS3I?' KELT' T-TF^S\"\nit\n'\u25a035335;\niHlAi   !\u25a0\u00ab\nr*\"*>W~\n19ET\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nMdttM* arary moraine oxMpt Sunday bar Tb. Now. Publishing company,\nfUalttd.  Nalaon.  _C.\nBaalim* lattara ahould bo addroaasd\nand ohocka aad mousy ordsra roads\ntayabla to Ths Nows Publishing oom-\npany. Iimltod. aad la so oaas to lndl-\nTtdual  msmbors of tho ataff.\nAdTsrtlalng rata cards and ABC.\naUtomonta of circulation mailed on\nraauoat. or may bo soon at ths offtc.\nof any advertising agency recognized\nby tho Canadian Proas association.\nSUBSCRIPTION  BATES\nBy mall (oountry) per month t   .\u00ab\u00bb\nfar yaar j.oo\nBy mall (olty) par ysar n.oo\nOutalds Canada, par month _      .71\nPor yaar j.jo\nDelivered, par weak IS\nPar raa.r ._ u oo\n Payable In Advance\nMember Audit Bureau of Circulation\nSATURDAY, MAT 10, 1924\nWefenf\nvsek\nLt\u00bbur%, A. Kirtawn\nFURNITURE SLIP-COVERS   FOR  SUMMER\nStrengthening the New Order\nThere is pertinent truth in\nthe statement of one of the\nleague's most ardent supporters, Dr. Benes, in The Nineteenth Century, that \"in striving after the consolidation of\nEurope and its individual parts,\nand after settling some questions left open by the war, it\n\u00ab.-\u2022. . still is necessary to\nmake use of other instruments\nand methods than those of the\nLeague of Nations.\" The foreign minister of Czechoslovakia had in mind the treaty\nrecently signed between his\ncountry and France, which, as\nhe rightly pointed out, offers\nthe means of stabilizing particular conditions not yet sufficiently protected by the machinery of the league. Its special reason is the common interest between France and\nCzecho-Slovakia in opposing the\nrestoration of monarchy and\nimperialism in central Europe\n\u2014a thing which would have\nunfortunate consequences for\nboth countries. In other words,\nit is simply a reinforcement\nof the existing system for preserving the political framework\nresting on the peace treaties.\ninasmuch as Czecho-Slovakia is,\npolitically and legally speaking,\na child of these treaties, she\nhas a very special interest in\nseeing them maintained.\nIncidentally, Dr. Benes admits that his country would\nhave liked a treaty between\nFrance and Britain. The failure to come to such an agreement was, in his opinion, partly\nresponsible for the Franco-\nCzech treaty. Here again the\n\u25a0 underlying principle is that an\nAnglo-French entente would assure stabilization in Europe by\ndiscouraging the Germans from\nattempting steps to undermine\nthe Versailles agreement. It\ndoes not follow that the treaty\nbetween France and the Czechs\nhas taken the place of a\nFranco-British pact. The Czech\ntreaty affects only a limited\narea. But it is a force for\ntreaty fulfilment, and so helps\nin maintaining stability in central Europe.\nAgreements supplementary to\nthe Dawes report will have to\nbe made, as happened in the\ncase of the Versailles treaty\nand the league. Just as Dr.\nBenes foresees a day when the\nFranco-Czech treaty may be\nsuperfluous as a result of the\nstrengthening of the league, so\nagreements supplementary to\nthe Dawes plan may also gradually become obsolete. Until\nsuch a time, however, there is\nlittle left to do, as the Czech\nstatesman indicates, but \"to\nprepare by degrees the way for\nthe future, which can be done\nby settling disputes by friendly\nagreements, safeguarding the\nnew order of things in Europe\nby partial treaties and employing the methods of the League\nof Nations.\"\nLord Grey recently expressed\nsimilar sentiments in discussing the problem of security for\nFrance. No specific arrangement, said he, within or without the league can cover every\npossible contingency. \"It would\nbe necessary to proceed step by\nstep, solving the biggest difficulties first. As Carlyle said:\n'Do the duty that lies nearest,\nand the next will already have\nbecome clearer.'\" It is this\nproblem which Ramsay MacDonald now faces in discussing\nthe political corollaries of the\nDawes plan.\t\n> A Unique Bell\nLloyds underwriters have had\nthe unusual experience of hear-\ninit the famous Lutine bell\ntwice in three days. This bell\nwu taken from the warship\nLutine in 1799, and is used to\nannounce the loss or arrival of\noverdue vessels.\nTwo strokes of the bell the\nother day was followed by an\ninouncement that the overdue\neJiii, on which reinsur-\nTOMORROW'S    MENU\nBreakfast\nStewed   Rhubarb\nCereal\nWhole Wheat Ueirtii.e Cakes\nCoffee Toast\nLuncheon\nCelery\n. Roast   Lei?  nf Umb\nRrnwn   Gray\/\nMashed  Prtito-^s\nYounsr  Cauliflower\nSpiced   Beet   Saleid\nCoffee Lemon    Tarts\nSupper\nPotato   Chins\nNut   Bread Tea Cheese\nMock   Ansel   Food\nPreserves\n\"What material ahall I use for\nalln-covers for my three-Diece upholstered parlor suite?\" asks a column friend who slsns herself Bride\nof Twenty.\nThe foremost Interior decorators\ntoday are sellinsr two materials for\nfurniture slip-covers\u2014Belgian linen\nand a very expensive tirade of cretonne which can be laundered repeatedly without fading.\nThe Belgian linen is what the majority of housewives use. It costs\nabout 11 a yard and comes SO inches\nwide, lit generally has tan. dark\nKrety, jrreen or reddish narrow stripes\nalternated with a satin stripe of some\nsoft-trned color such as buff \"r\npearl (tray. About 24 ya-ds of Belgian linen are reeiulrcd to make covers fur a three-piece parlor \"over-\nstuffeel\" set consisting of a large\ndavenport and two generous-sized\nitrmehalrs.\nThe fade-proof figured cretonne\nabove mentioned costs anvwhere from\nH tc 19 a yard. Often It Is glar.ed.\nBecause   of   Its   high    price   it   is.   of\ncourse, beyond the \u2022 reach of most\nof   us.\nAnd now that 1 have told vou\nwhat preeminent Interior decorators\nadviae. I am gdng to tell vou what\nI advise. It Is this: The purchase of\ninexpensive cretonne In a cool, green\nall-over leaf pattern which will not\nsoil nulokly. Of course, this cheaper\ncretonne cannot be as successfully\nlaundered as the $l\u00bb-a-vard grade:\nbut it can often be used for two\nsuccessive summers without being\nwashed if It ls shaken anel aired\ntheeroughly iifter the first season. And\nwhen the dav ceemes when It absolutely must be washed. It will still\nbe usable even if It bits faded slightly\nIf you declele open huylng this\ncheaper cretonne, be sure to choose\nas wide a material as possible, for\nhv selecting the yard-wide varletv\nveeu will need le'ss than if you choose\nthe 27-ineh width.\nA generation ago furniture slipcovers were hound with narrow.\nDlaln-colored braid on the seams. Todav all seams are Frenehed anel braid\nIs nrt used. This method not onlv\nmakes a more closely fitting cover,\nbut saves the expense of having to\nbuv  braid.\n\"Can you tell me where to buv a\npattern for furniture slip-covers?\" is\na ouestlon which freementlv comes In\nto me. No, 1 canneit. Furniture Is\nmade in so manv styles and shnpes.\nnnd each housewife must make he'r\nown pattern bv e'utting old sheets\nInto sections anel pinning them rn\nher chair e,r davenport. Few of us\ncan afford to have a professional upholsterer make these overs for us.\nAll Inquiries addressed to Mias Kirk\nman In care of the \"Efficient House\nkeeping\" department wilt be answered\nIn these columns In their turn. This\nrequires considerable time, however\ncwlng to the great number received\nSo, if a personal or quicker reply ls\ndesired, a stamped and self-addressed\nenvelope must be enclosed with the\nquestion. Be sure to use your full\nname, street number, and the name of\nyour olty and province.\nTHH EDITOR\nances had been paid, had arrived at Lisbon. Two days later\nthe room heard two strokes of\nthe bell again and also heard,\nmuch to its amazement, that\nthe bark Harald had reached\nChinwangtao, China, after\nbeing two months overdue. Reinsurances up to 75 guineas\nper 100 pounds had been taken\nout on the Harald, and it is\nvery rare that a vessel arrives\nafter such a high insurance\nrate has been paid.\t\neft t\nTold in Rime 1\nunderntand   nnd   risque    enough    lor\nthe older ones to enjoy.\nCorn-ct thia htrntenee: \"I'd quit\n.imokinif in a inin.iH1,'* said he, 'if\nI thought  it   witun't   tfool  for  ine.'\nNelson News of the Day\nJ. Burgest, Carpenter.   Phon* 850R8\n(4428)\n(Trmorrow  is  Mother's day.)\nShe   croons  o'er   the cradle,\nThe  day's  wcrk   is  done;\nA   woman    entrusted\nWith   (iod'a   only   Bon.\nHow   soothing   her  accent,\nHow    tender    her    touch!\nWhen   all   men   despised   him.\nShe loved him so much.\nHis  hrulsed   fee*   were bathed\nHy the tears that she shed,\nAnd   the  dust  wiped   away\nWith the hairs of her head.\nI\nShe anointed  her  Lord\nWhere the blood trickled down\nFrom  the stripes of the  lash\nAnd the thorns Cl the crown.\nCondemned, mocked, forsaken,\nBetrayed   by   hU  own\u2014\nShe   pled   for   the   life\nOf her master alone.\nShe followed him weeping\nThrough   Calvary's   gloom,\nThe   lust   at   the  cross\nAnd  the first  at  the tomb.\nI  arise,  walk  and   talk\nWith   my   Cod  at  her touch;\nShe loved him, still leves him,\nMy   Jesus,   so   much!\nWM.   DOVEY.\nThe Lighter Side\nPermanent Waving. Reduced prices\nfor one week, One Dollar Per Curl;\nnot less than six curls. The Acton\nHair  Company. (4&G2)\nDon't miss \"Movie Mad.\" on Page\nTlirt-e today. It is Hazel Deyo\nItatclu-lor's best serial, Just issued for\npublication, (4573)\nWanted\u2014Contractor to Haul White\nWn\u00ab IaOgs, Kltto'i Landing. Thi**- li\na truck hanl. Llndsley Broi. (Canadian) Company. 14577)\nDaughters & Maids of Knglan.l Bazaar on Monday in Memorial Hall.\nAfternoon tea, home rooking, stall for\nllie children snd candy; all kinds of\nchildren's garments. Whist drive nt\nnight, 44578)\nMothers of Scouts and Cuhs of\nTroop No. 1: The ladles of the Auxiliary wish io thank you for your generous assistance in th*\u00bbir teas, bake\nsales,   etc.,   during   the   past   year.\nHf.80)\nNOTICB\nOwing to work on the line the electric power will be off from 4 a.m. to\n6 a.m, Sunday  morning. (458:1)\nAll  members of Nelson  Aerie,  No.\nF.O.B.,   are   requested    to    meet   nt    the\nKagle    Hall    today    at    1:30    p.m.    fi\nthe    purpose   uf   attending    the    funer\nof   the   late  Brother  Paul   Nipou.\n(4582)\nW. W. Ferguson. Barrister, Solicitor,\nNotary   Public,   Cllker   Block.        (4447)\nVictor, the Inimitable piano accordionist (from Starland) will play at\nthe Armory dance thin evening. Umal\ntime, usual  price. (4585)\nAncient Order of Foresters: All\nofficers and ni embers meet at Odd\nFellows' Hall nt 1 :S0 sharp todny to\nattend   late   Brother   Nipou's   funeral.\n(4588)\nSk^JIx^\nWLENOKE\nA graceful dinner gown is made\nof crepe back black satin with\ntunic skirt and rhinestone-studded\nJet pnlllets on the girdle and ends\nof the loosely draped bands. These\ngive a .youthful, supple look to\n\u2022the figure.\nNote, also, that the rhlnestone\ntrimming: is cleverly carried away\nfrom the face, which is a very\ngood feature, as few faces could\nstand the competition with such\nsparkling accessories. This is a\nparticularly good dress for [the\nwoman   with   grown   children.\nWORTH   KNOWING\nAt last the cloche is tottering on\nits throne\u2014or, at any rate, on our\nheads. You still see lt everywhere,\nand it is still adorably trim, but\nthe designers of millinery seem to\nbe succeeding in their long efforts\nto break its spell. Cunning little,\nclose-fitting, trtcornes are becoming\npopular, and \u25a0 huge vogue is promised for lace hats in black, sand\nand cinnamon colors.\nEnter tile walking stick as an\naccompaniment to (he scarf and\nhat set with the tailored suit. No,\nit Ib not a New York idea The\nreport   comes   from   St.   Louis!\nThe severely tailored suit is bringing  about a  revival  of  covert   cloth.\nScarlet coat linings ami trimming\ndetails, particularly tn pipings, are a\ncolorful   note Dn  Fifth  avenue.\nof\nJoura\nTRADE ACTIVE\nAND GAINING\nTeH Years Ago\n-?\nDANCE,\nCAPITOL\n9  P.M.\nTONIGHT,    EAGLE    HALL.\nORCHESTRA,     35     CENTS,\n(4587)\nAs a general thing the real boss ir\nthe famllly is the one that does the\nworst   \u25a0ill. I|g\n o\t\nFeminine wardrobe: A few odds\nand   ends   added   to   a   collection   of\nstockings.\nTemptation Is no disgrace. The\ndevil never bctfjiers to tempt those\nwho   belong   to   him.\nThe trouble with modern youth\nseems to be too much aspiration\nwithout enough  perspiration.\nWe shall he glad to turn our back\non machine politics If somebody\nwill  show   ua   some   other   kind.\nThe flowers that bloom In the\nsprLag, tra la, seem to be all dandelions if you are trying to make\na lawn.\nIt's an unfair system and the kind\nof conduct that will get you to\nHeaven won't get you into vaudeville.\nAnother need of the times is an\nample reward for the invention of\na new word to call  the umpire.\nTtyy have ex em ted generals, colonels and majors of the rebel army in\nMexico, but tin- private ls still at\nlarge.\nMan has hj\u00ab weaknesses, hut he\ndoesn't try on three smaller sizes\nbefore resigning himself to a shoe\nthat   fits.\nIJves there a man with soul so\ndead, who never to his friend has\nsaid:; \"Have them cut out or you'll\nbe   dead.\"\nAt times It would be difficult to\npick out the Important citizens If\nbad manners hadn t been invented.\nA man is handicappod. Even\nif he feel* that way, he is ashamed to describe a thins >*\n\"perfectly  esling.**\nThe hard thing about bedtime\nstories Is to make them simple\nenough    lor    tbe    younger    oues    ts\nAncient    Order\ni\nAll\nHe,veil\n\u25a0    e,f    t\nand\nt  K.I'.\n(e'e-loek\ninleers\nellt-l\n.'emrt\nHull\nfor\nInvii\nNelson,\nCourt    i-:n\ni\nStar\nof   Koot\n**\u2022'\nSun-\nday eve\nparade.\nnlng nt   0:4\nVisiting\nhure'h\n\u25a0ei\n(4589)\nTonight, O.W.V.A Progressive Whist\nDrive, Armory, 1:45; Dancing at 10.\nSpecial musical features by Victor,\nthe popular piano accordionist. Admission,   35   cents. (45S4)\nSMELTERS SHOW\nA FURTHER RISE\nTouch Forty on Montreal\nMarket but Recede\na Little.\nMONTREAL.    Ma\nolume of trade in !\n9\u2014An unusunl\n\u25a0Iters nnd Mont-\nzed trading In\nthe stock market today, (Ieneral\nstrength with sharp advances was\nshown. Snulters le<1 in activity, and\ngained l1* at the close of tt% after\nselling   nt   tlie   new   hlch   of   40.\nMontreal Power came second, and\nclosed n( 1(15 ex-dividend, up 2 points.\nSpanish common was down 1% lit 101.\nMontreal Tramways, for strongest\nclosing, at Lit, up 20 points, and\nselling at the new high of 1\nOgllvie recorded the big loss, down 10\nat   305.\nTwin citv was up 44.\nClosing prices: Ahitihl, f>7 H ; Brazil,\nSi \\_ Breweries, Til; Hronipton, 3.r.; Lauren tide. Kfi %; Hritlsh Kmpire Steel\nfirst preferred, 3fi; British Empire\n.Steel se.'imd preferred, ll; SpanLsh pr*\nferred. 111%; Spanish common, 101;\nSmelters, 19%; Montreal Power, III\nQuebec I'ower. 74; Kteel of Canada, 71\nTextile, fi!\u00bbtt.\n(Prom The Daily News, May 10, 1914)\nReplying to the toast of the Canadian militia. Maj.-Con. Sir William\nOtter, at a dinner in Toronto re-\ncentlv, made some strong statements\nregarding the unprepared stale of\nCanada    in   rase   ot   external   danger.\n\u2022 *    *\nRev. R. J. Mclntyre will leave this\nafternoon for Kamloops to attend\nthe provincial Met ho.lnt conference,\nof which  he Is aMUtUt secretary.\nY.M.C.A. Juniors arc tn hike to\nAnderson creek today under the\ncharge of  the  physical director.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nThe..civic authorities are endeavoring to locate Mary K. Woosier. who\nwas a shareholder in tho Nelson\nStreet   Railway   company,   limited.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nThe   water   In   the   West   Arm   h:is\nrisen   1H    feet   in   the   last   1 \\   boms.\nnd    stands    at    in    feet    ?\\_     Inches\nhove   low   water   mark.\nEGG MARKETS\nOTTAWA,  May  St.\u2014 Eggs:\nToronto\u2014Jobbing, specials 28c, extras 28c, firsts 25c; one car of firsts\noffered at 25c f.o.b. Winnipeg; one\ncar western firsts, 2fic; two cars Ontario extras. 29c; firsts, 27c f.o.b.\ncountry   points.\nMontr-al - Active, demand good; Jobbing, specials 32c to 33c; extras 211c\nto   :il*i\\   firsts   2(lc   to   27c,\nPrairies\u20141'iichrfnged; receipts are\nheavy.\nVancouver\u2014Kasy; paying country\npoints, extras 2 tie, firsts 24c; Jobbing,  extras 28c,  firsts  26c.\nNew York and Chicago markets\nunchangedi\nIf Jemei W. Berten. M.D,\nDon't Wait for Pain to\nArouse You\n(Registered   in   accordance   with   the\nCopyright  act.)\nYou have read so much about the\ndreadful effects in the body of the\npoisons from the roots rf the teeth,\nand pyorrhea\u2014pus\u2014In the gums, that\nvou have perhaps thought that the\ndoctors and the dentists were rnng-\nnifving this  matter.\n1'nl'ortunatelv It cannot be magnified, because next to the intestine itself, there CAH he no doubt thnt the\ntonsils, teeth, and gums \u25a0cause more\nInfection than any other part rf the\nbodv.\nYou will remember that when a\npoison goes down into tho stomach.\nand has to fight its way through\nthe processes of digestion in the intestine and liver, thnt a good deal of\nthe harm Is taken out cf lt. But\nfrom the roots of tMJii WMO from\nthe gums, the harmful suhstances go\ndirectly Into the blood stream, and\nthus small amounts can set up serious\ntrouble.\nAnd so. when vou go to your physician, vou will likely say. \"I den't\nknow what's the*, matter with me.\nbut I don't feci up to the mark. I\ndon't seem to ent rttfit sleep right,\nor take the proper interest In anything. I can't say I'm sick, but cer-\ntainlv I am not really fit. 1 am not\ntnvself.\"\nIn the old davs. If vou could afford It. vou were advised to rest up\na  hit, or take a  vacation.\nNow rne of thc first things your\nphysician docs is to look into your,\nmouth.\nIt mav be some suspicious-looking\nteeth, some crowns thnt have been\non  for vears,  or possibly   pyorrhea.\nScmetlrnes it Is a pair of bad tonsils.\nInstead of sending you on a vacation he sends vou off to get an\nX-rnv of the teeth. The films will\nshow up the trouble, and the removal\nof a tooti_pr two, and the cleaning\nup the gums is al once indicated.\nVou know yi u are sound enough, (hat\nyou have no organic trouble, because\nyour Insurance examinations have\nrevealed this. That was what puzzled\nyou.\nRut when you realize thnt with Infected roots sending their daily ouota\nof poison direetlv into the blood, and\nnNo indirectly along with the food\ninto the stomach and Intestine, you\nran see that vou are up against a\nstiff   proposition   to   keep   fit.\nNow. it mav be a lazy liver that\nis making vou feel tired out and dis-\ninicrested in jttjs but if you have\nI ecu in the habit of visiting the\n'l-'titisl onlv when vou have a toothache, your trouble is likely in ycur\nmouth.\nWhen a man combines business with\npleasure, business usually gets tbe\nshort   end   of   it.\nCredit Men's Report Shows\nthe Spring Movement is\nWell Under Way\nWINIPEO, May 9 (By Canadian\nPress).\u2014The weekly trade report of\nthe Canadian Credit Men's Trust association   states:\nHalifax\u2014Wholesaler d report sales\nslightly Improved. Retail business\noniy lair* Collections In some districts better.\nMontreal\u2014(Jood business reported ln\nhardware and building supply lines.\nOry goods and boots and shops sntls-\nfactory; retail business, however, remains  quiet.\nToronto\u2014Business Is reported to be\nactive In many lines, especially millinery, clothing footwear and dry goods.\nfurther Improvement is I \/ ked for.\nPair activity Is maintained in most\nIndustries.\nWinnipeg\u2014Trade in most lines Is\nkeeping up to expectations, although\nreports indicate a falling off in certain commodities. Retail trade fair fn\nthe -city hut quiet at country points\nwhere   farmers   are   busy   on   the   land.\nRc-gina \u2014Wholesale   trade   is   reported\nfair. Retail trade shows slight In\narovement.      Collections    quiet.\nSaskatoon \u2014 Wholesale and rata!\ntrade In the city quiet. Countr\ndistricts reported backward for Ul\ntime of year owing lo weather comH\ntldns.    Collections slow.\nCalgary\u2014Spring activities causln\nconsiderable Improvement in season\nable lines, particularly Hardware.! Gen\neral tone of business healthy. CUl\nrent   collections   good.\nEdmonton\u2014Business generally I\ngoing along quietly. Farmers bug]\nConditions  promising.\nVancouver\u2014Conditions normal f\nwholesale grocery lines. Both whol*\nsale and retail busisess in dry good\nand hardware show decided improvfl\nment over previous week. Boots an\nshoes fair.    Collections fair.\nNew Dail Group\nfor Independence\nand One Irelam\nDnnUN. Mny 9.\u2014J. MoGrath. for\nmer minister of commerce, and Danlfl\nMcCarthy, former government whl]\nln the dail, who resigned their Post;\nduring the recent army crisis, an\nnounced tonight the formation Of\nnew dail group, whoso policy will b\ncomplete Independence terrltorli\nunity,  and  economic  progress.\nIf   he  Is  found  under  an   IncognH\nor a  horse,  he may be a prince,\n$5.00 DOWN\nWill make you the owner\nof the Grand Prize Eureka\nVacuum Cleaner.\nBalance   in   Small   Monthly   Installments.\nHOWE ELECTRIC CO.\nPHONE 530    OPERA HOUSE BLOCK    NELSON, B.C.\nTwenty Years Ago\n(From Tbe Daily News, May i.0. 1904)\nJohn Roultbce is at the Hume from\nRossland. for the purpose of attending the sale of the Dumas property\ntoday,\n\u2022 i   a\nYesterday tbe party ot McOill students, who have been visiting this\ncitv and district on their western\ntour, inspected the Hall Mines smelter works in the morning, and later\nwent down to Honnington falls, where\nthe rest of the day was snont inspecting   tbe   power   company's   plant.\nDr. V. _t Morrison has .Hist received his new gasoline launch from\nC. B. Miller, thc agent, and shy is a\nbeauty.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nThe Ymir Mirror, after u life of\nthree vears, bus ceased to exist, and\nC. Dell Smith, and his family are\nin Nelson on their way to Victoria,\nwhere Mr .Smith will take a position\non one of the  city  papers.\nTbe Rimer Walter's company will\nnppear at the opera house next week\nfor two nights, in \"The Thoroughbred Trami\" and \"Just Struck\nTown.\"\nOUR   VICTOR   RECORD\nSTOCK IS ALWAYS\nUP-TO-DATE\nSpecial    Attention    Given    to     Mail\nOrders.\nHEINTZMAN  4  CO.,   LTD.\n511    Baker   Street Phone   117\nNAKI'Sp. 1U\\. May 9 \u2014 D\/ H. Itawl-\nIngs has left Tor Edge wood to resume bis contract on the Kdgewood-\nVernon road. It will be ready for\nthrough traffic thin fall. H. J. I*-\nUrasli, ime of the partners, left a\nfew il.i \\# ago with a gang of men\nfor  the  work.\nThe flrat case of prosecution for\nnonpayment of a motor car licence\nwas brought before the magistrate here\nthis week. The delinquent motorist\nwas from ths south, who waa fined\nand made to pay up his licence.\nThere ls now a movement on foot\nalong the local Conservatives to bring\nforth a candidate fo*T the forthcoming\nelection.\nE\nWe are not giving away\nGroceries, but we are selling Aluminum Ware, at\nprices that will pay you to\nbuy from us. Here are a\nfew of the plums: . ,,\nAluminum Percolators,\neach $1.25\nAluminum Double Boilers,\n2-quart,   each   .  $1.25\nAluminum Tea Kettles, 5-\nquart,  each    $2.00\nAluminum Tea Kettles, 7-\nquart, each  $3.25\nAluminum Round Roasters,\neach $1.25\nAluminum  Oval  Roasters,\neach    $3.00\nAluminum Oval Dish Pans,\neach    $1.50v\nEvery Article Guaranteed\nSALE FOR ONE WEEK ONLY\nWatch Our Windows  for\nins\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware    ...\nNELSON B.C.\n^     FARES\nTo Eastern Destinations\nON SALE DAILY MAY 22 TO SEPT. 15-\nL1MIT OCTOBER 31\nRETURN\nTVInnipfp   \t\nToronto  \t\n i 72.00\n  113.75\n  113.76\n_  113.75\n  111.SO\nKurt    William\nNiagara   Fails   \t\n I I1M\n  I'd\"\n  127.96\nLondon   \t\nMontreal   \t\n.Mont-ton   \t\nllalifeex    \t\nCUeua  :\n   1.(2.70\n  U7.90\n  153.45\nSt.   Paul   \t\nMinneapolis   \t\nDululh   \t\n     72.00\n     73.00\n     72.00\n     K6.00\n  H7.-0\nUoston\n.   153.50\nMANY ADDITIONAL DESTINATIONS\nAsk for Rates From and To Any Point\nRoute via Port Arthur or via Soo Line, through Winnipeg or Portal, thence via Chicago or Sault Ste. Marie,\nvia Great Lakes; or via California at additional fare; or\ngood to go via one of the above routes, return another.\nSee Local Agents or Write for Details\nJ. S. CARTER, District Passenger Agent,  Nelson\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nOffica   8meltmg   .net    R.fining   Departm\u00abnt\nTRAIL,   BRITISH    COLUMBIA '    '\nSmelters and Refiners\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Orea.\nProducers of Gold,  Silver, Copper,  Pig Lead and Zinc\nTAbANAC.   TRAIL\nBuilding\nMaterial  John Bums* Son\nLet us figure your bills of\nBuilding Material. Coast Lumber  a   specialty.\nIf You Wish to Buy or\nSell a Canoe or Launch\nTry the Classified\nColumns\nSummer is approaching, with a demand for water\ncraft so that enthusiasts may enjoy exhilarating outings on the lake and river. If you have a canoe,\nlaunch or rowboat which you wish to sell, or if you\nwish to purchase one, advertise your wants in the\nClassified Columns of The Daily News.\nTo Insert a Classified Ad, Phone 144\n(Two Linet) or Write\n mmmr\n\u25a0\nTHE NELSON 3\u00a3LT NETS.. SATuET>A? MOMCNG. MA? 10,1025\nTags Jfw'\nPuritan\nSlippers\nWe have just received\n2 lines ih this new Puritan\nmodel. This is the latest\nfrom the Eastern market.\nPatent Leather and\nLog Cabin Buck.\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders  in  Footfashion\nHealth and Happiness Game\nWith \"Fnilt-a-tlves\"\nMade From Fruit Juices and Tonics\n\"Fruit-a-tives\", the wonderful\nmedicine made from the juices of\napples, oranges, figs and prunes, is\none of the greatest means of doing\ngood that this country of ours haa\never known.\n\"Fruit-a-tives\" is bringing health\nto hundreds and hundreds of people\nwho suffer with chronic Constipation,\nBiliousness and Dyspepsia.\nMr. Frank Hall of Wyevale, Ont.,\nsays, \"I purchased a box of \"Fruit-a-\ntives \"and began the treatment. My\ncondition improved immediately.\nThe dyspepsia ceased to be the burden\nof my life as it had been, and I was\nfreed of Constipation\".\n50c. abox,f>for$l\u00bb SO, trial size 25c,\nAt dealers or sent by Fruit a-tivei\nLiDtlted, Ottawa, o.jl.\nKASLO PROVINCIALS\nSUGGEST  McLELLAN\nHe  Will  Be Presented to\nNakusp Convention as\nTheir Candidate\nKASLO,  B.C..  Ma\n-At a  meeting\nmmh^m^^ for free \\tnrt\\t\n\u25a0^'\u25a0:i^^^P^    Riving\nII    I    ^^T     \"lfl,J \"r  Trench's\nV M        |    ^^^^    World-funoua prep-\nI    ll^B    Brati ,;*   f,'r |,'l\";\"!w>'\nI     WB***^P\n*\"    *\u25a0    *\"     m^m     i j, \u201e, i,. treatmt-n t.\nt'ver30ye\u00bbra'nuecenB. TentimonlalB ff-om all parti\n.tftheworld' overlOOOlnoneypar. Writeaioncew\nTRENCH'S  REMEDIES LIMITED\nSt, JuDca' Cham ben*. Til Adelaide BL.E.\n'Cut thisoun lomuui. Ontario\nTeapots\n\\W hitvf tho inrRcut assOftflUnl\nof   Teapots   in   tho   Interior.-\nPriced st from 50\u00a3 to $2.50\nAll    Htzos,    shupes   and   designs.\nSee These Before Buying\nDronsfield\nBros*\nTHE   CHINA   SHOP\nNext  Masonic  Temple,   Baker St.\nNELSON\nCLASSIFIED     ADS     BRING     RESULTS   EVERY   TIME.\nnight   IS   (It-legates   were   rhosen   to   at-\n1'ini   the   eonlag   nominating   convert-\ntinri ;ii Nakusp fro tli-- Kaslo-Sloeau\nriding.\nThe names of W. II. Burgess. Itannv\nUoLtnaa, Alexander Sutherland, A. J.\nCurie and A. T Carhuid were placed\nhefore the meeting hy various mem-\nHH f6ff the honor of ,lieing K;i\u00ab1i*>'m\nnominee fnr ciuutidate in ihe coming\nelection.\nFor business or other reasons several of these men would nol lei their\nnames go before the meeting for\nthi a honor, and withdrew. The party\nthen unanimously indorsed Danny Mr-\nLellan hs Kaslo's candidate for the\nparty   nomination.\nMr MeLellan is an old-timer In the\nAiiisworth-Sloean territory. For thi\nlast four years he haa lived at Kaslo\nand     he     is     Interested     in     the     Utlc.i\nANOTHER STORE\nBUILDS NAKUSP\nArrow Park Wharf Will Be\nBig Improvement; New\nPowell Manager\nC.,    Mav    !\u2022\u25a0\u2014 E.    LodR\nne*B bvtUtni   at   ths\nNAKtSI'.\nhits started\ncorner of Br\nwhich will he used as an ice cream\nparlor and will anoilur addition to\nparlor and will add another addition to\nn-'ss lu lli\u00ab- i:pi>- . portion of tli\nH.   ThorffOOd   has   the  contract,\nThomas     Lean,    contractor    for    ihe\nAnew     I'ark     wharf,    in    in    town\nbusiness    i'.oito. i.-d    with    the   securing\nof    supplies     fur    his    work.       1\npurls    the    new     si met ure    will\ngr\nille\npre\nent\nt   will   have   Ihe   standard   width\nof   111!   feet,   anil   steamers   will   not   li\nrequired   to   turn   around   and   back   up\nas   tlov   have   ln   the   past.\nW. W. Powell of the W, V. Powell\ncompany. Nelson, arrived here Tuesday tu look after his lumber interests\nhere. He brought witii him W. Jarvls,\nwho will be located here as local\nmanager for the company, Mr. Jarvls\nlias   been   connected   with   the   company\n;i rn\np<\ntitllt\ni r\nFERTILIZE    NOW,    BEFORE    IT    IS   TOO    LATE\nWITH   VICTORIA   CHEMICAL    COMPANY'S\nFERTILIZERS\nAND\nFINELY GROUND SULPHUR\nBOOKLETS   AND   PRICES   AT\nCANADIAN    EXPLOSIVES    LTD.\nP.O.   Box   81\nNelson, B.C.\nL.   _mm\n.\u00bb*\nSOW MORNING.\n'U CHASE b SANBORN S\nIN Ml\nAND\nI   LB.\nCARTONS\nSUPERI\nBLACK TEA\nBLACK\nllll.e.\nENVELOPES\nWe carry thc largest atock in the interior of British Columbia.\nOur large buying capacity enables us to give you\nthe lowest prices.\nTHEDAILYNEWSJOBDEPT.\n\"Quality Printers\"\nPHONE 144 (Two Lines)        \"\nThis column Is being conducted\nby Mrs. M. -I. Vlgneux. All news\nof a social nature, Including receptions, private entertainments, personal Items, marriages, etc., will\nappear ln this column. Telephone\nMrs.   Vlgneux.\nPossibly the most enjoyable affair\nof the season took place laat evening when about 225 guests gathered\nIn the lOugle hall, where the recently\nformed   Gyro   club   held   Its   Initial   at-\n>me, which took the form of a dance.\nThe energetic decoration committee\nconsist ing of .lack Weir an chairman,\nA. C. Emory, John Cartmel, Dave\nWade and J. H, Hoblnson was responsible for the elaborate ideas carried out In the decorations, the color\nscheme throughout being gold and\nblue, the club's colors. Streamer effects were prevalent, and \u00abn artistic\npergola made an attractive setting\nfor the orchestra. In the center of\nths hall hung the gyroscope, the club's\n\u25a0 iiibb-ni. Huge Canadian und American\nflags gracefully drain-.\\ their coat-of-\narnis. Balloons and confetti were\nmuch In evlden'-,.. For those who\ndid not care to dance, M;ih Jongg,\nwhist and bridge games were provided\nin the balconies of the hall. The\nMah Jongg balcony was carried out\nto the letter as emblematic of China\nwith huge umbrellas, lanterns and\nscreens. These games were ably taken\ncharge of by Mrs- W. O, Rose. The\nbanijuet hall, where a delicious supper was provided bv the ladles of\nthe CHurch of the Redeemer, Fair-\nview, wns Indeed something to be\nproud of. and the ladies, as well as\nthe members of the club, were highly\ncomplimented oa their efforts. Pave\nWade was floor manager.! Decorations on the tables, which were set\nin tlie Knights of Pythias' hall, were\nmostly spring blossoms, softly shaded\nblue and gold lamps again lending an\noriental effect. The Gyro orchestra,\nwhich was entirely composed of members of the club, wun a credit to\nthe organization. They were, orchestra leader and pianist, V. K. Wheeler;\nSaxophone, Wilbur li lane hard; cornet,\nKred Hartwlg; banjo, Thomas Cran\nnage; violin, Jack Laughton, and\ndrums. Jack Amiable.. Mrs. Norman\nMacDonald and Paul Pitner sang a\nml    T.    Crannage    rendered    a\nan jo\nolo\nA fraternal message from the Cal\ngary Gyro club was received over\nihe    radio    installed    for    the    occasion\nMuch   credit   was   given   Paul   Pitner\nas     chairman     of     the     entertainment\ncommittee, Nelson being the baby Gyro\nelub   of    British   Columbia.\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nRev. J. H, Wright, Josephine street,\npastor of Trinity Methodist church,\nlefi last evening by the Kettle Valley\nfor Vancouver, where he will attend\nthe    British    Columbia   Methodist   con-\nMr. and Mrs, A. Willey, Ruth and\nAllen Willey, of Bonnlngton, motored\nto   town   yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. William Johns of Rock Creek\nis a visitor In the city a guest at\nthe home her brother-in-law and\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Allen,\n412    Victoria   street.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMrs. George Horstead. G02 Robson\nstreet, entertained at 1 pretty tea\nThursday afternoon complimentary to\nMrs. I-;. Colclough and her daughter.\nMiss Nellie Colclough, who leave the\ncity shortly. Tulips and daffodils\nwere the flowers used In decorations.\nMrs. George Jubnstone presided al\nthS tea urn, and Mrs J. Kred Hume\ncut the ices. Assisting in serving\nwere Miss Nellie Culcluutfi. Mrs.\nArt bur Lakes and Mrs. P. P. Towns-\nend. Those bidden to the affair were\nMrs. R. A. Peebles, Mrs. W. K. Jarvls.\nMrs. Gilbert Anderson, Mrs, C, K.\nWilson, Mrs. F. R. Jelfs, Mrs. G. H.\nTaylor, Mrs. Thomas Irving, Mrs.\nW. A. Thurman. Mrs. F. Brodle. Mrs\nH. Harrison. Mrs. Charles V. Hunter\nMrs. II. Il Dill, Mrs. Harrv Amas.\nMrs. K. Colclough. Mrs. p, It. Towns-\nend, Mrs. II, C. Grizzelle, Miss Irene\nDonaldson of Revelstoke, Mrs. H. McArthur and Mrs. M. Oles of Vancouver.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nT. J. Polrer of Newport. Wash.,\nwill be In the city and district for\nthe   next   few  weeks\nMrs. Will tain Moure, Hall Mines\nRoad, acted as hostess Wednesday\nafternoon when the Weekly Bridge\nclub met at her home and enjoyed\na few rubbers of bridge. Painty\nrefreshments were served, and those\npresent were Mrs. Iv Gammmi, M rs.\nC. D. Shaw. Mrs. R, G. McK. own.\nMrs, W. H. J. Shaw. Mrs. Howard\nBush. Mrs. Pan MeKaehern, Mrs. T.\nKenwlck. Mrs. Charles F. Hunter,\nMrs. K. L. Buchanan. Mrs. J, II, Robinson   and   Mrs.   Ferguson   Wilson.\nTrinity Methodist chun-h bamim-i\nImiII was a Jolly scene Thursday evening when the members of the church\nchoir and the members of the Voung\nPeople's society gathered to honor\nMiss Nellie Colclough. who leaves the\ncitv shortly, Mrs. It. P. Hall most\n.il.lv did the honors of the evening\nhi reading the address, to which Miss\nfulch.ugh fittingly answered. The gift\nlook the form of a platinum bar pin\nP. L Irwin made a Utile speech, after\nwhich a social evening and delightful* refresh menu* were enjoyed by all.\nAmong those lo be present were Mr.\nand Mrs. P. Townsend, MYs. E. Col-\n.-lough. Miss Knld LL'er, Miss Flaine\nCo)\u00abS, F. U Irwin, Miss Fva Irwin.\nMiss Thelma Neelin, Miss Ina Steed.\nMiss Vera Walley, Miss M. Boss. Miss\nKva Armstrong. Miss Hazel Maundrell.\nMiss Mavme Troll, Miss Que.-nie Annable, Miss i:iva Hanna. Mrs. T, E.\nHigginbotham, Miss Jeannette Higginbotham. Mrs- C. W. Tvler. Mrs. Gordon\nAllan, Mrs. Charles P. Caldwell, Mr.\nand Mrs. G, C. Arneson, Mrs. R. L.\nNorman, Mrs. J. Fleury. Mrs. T. Hancock. .Mrs Norman Stilths, Mrs. A. T,\nWalley, Mrs, George Ferguson, Miss\nPorothy Wright, Rev. J. H, Wright.\nMr. ahd Mrs. R. P. Hall, Dr. G. A. C.\nWalley, Waller Kettlewell, Miss Freeda\nB Hume, iltirry Bolton, , J, Hlnilt.\nFred Weir, Mrs. J. E. Annable. Jack\nAnnable. Miss M. Sii^pis. Percy Amas,\nMr. and Mrs. J. F. Grummet t, J.\nSi|iiires. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard ('amp-\nbell, Mr. and Mrs. T. -Caldwell, J. L.\nBartlndale. J, Rees, Albert Brown,\ni Jeorge Lambert, Miss Gladys Lambert\nand  Miss Myrtle Pyme.\nMrs. J. H. Robinson, 412 Robson\nstreet, left by the Kettle Valley\nThursday evening for Vancouver.\nwhere she was called by the death\nof   her   uncle.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nRev. Sister M. Catherine and Rev.\nSister M. Alphonsus, both of St.\nJoseph's hospital in Rossland, who\nhave been in the city for a short\nstay, leave this morning for their\nhome. Sister M, Catharine will be\nre i n em he red by the pioneer pupils an\none of the sisters who first opened\nHt.   Joseph's   convent   here.\nMr. and Mrs. A. E. Pickford were\nthe tcuesls of honor last evening at\na dinner given by Mr. and Mrs. F. A.\nMcDonald,   Stanley street.\nJames Moore of Waverley, N.Sv who\nhas been the guest of his brother and\nsister-in-law, Mr. und Mrs\nMoore, for the past week.\nfor his home. Mr. Moore and his\nbrother hud not met ln IS years.\nSpokan*,  where they  will  remain tor\nz few days.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Irene Donaldson of Revelstoke,\nwho has been the guest of Mr. and\nMrs. H. C. QrluHle for the past\ncouple of weeks, left Thursday evening by the Kettle Valley for Vancouver, where she will spend a short\ntime before returning to her home.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMa;*!, Graham Starr and his mother,\nMn. O. Starr, have recently taken a\nsuite   in   the  Kerr  apartments.\nRev. Dr. Calvert of Kaslo spent\nyesterday   in   the   city.\nMr. and Mrs. W. L. Hall left last\nevening for Vancouver by the Kettle\nValley.\nMiss Mhora McDonald and Miss\nViolet Towgood will be the hostesses\ntoday at the tennis tea on the lower\ncourts.\nJohn J. Rlnns of Vancouver, who\nhas   been  in Kaslo,  is a city  visitor.\nMrs. H. Harrop and son, Noel, of\nHarrop, motored to the elty yesterday.\nThey left In the afternoon accompanied l>y Miss Winnie Harrop, who\nis attending school  in  town.\nMrs. John Latta and young daughter, Frances, of Vancouver, who have\nbeen visiting Pr. and Mrs. H. H, Mac-\nenzie. Carbonate street, for fhe last\nfew months, left last evening by the\nKettle   Valley   for   their   home.\nA delightful supper and miscellaneous shower was given to Mrs. J.\nBaldwin, a recent bride, hy the\nDaughters of Scotia Thursday evening In the Memorial hall. The many\npretty and useful gifts were presented in a large box trimmed with\nfancy paper and designs of bleubirds.\nTwenty-three   me tubers   were  present.\nVery Rev. Father J. Althoff, V.O.,\nwas very much surprised when a delegation of little tots approached him\nMonday morning and presented him\nwith a handsome leather club bag on\nthe event of his vuth birthday\nThe gift was a token from St, Joseph's\nschool children and the children\nSt. Mary sodality as a mark of\nesteem. Miss Mary Hunden read a\nfitting address, and Master Jackh\nWilliams made ihe presentation.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. George Vincent, daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. A. S. Horswiil, Fair-\nview, leaves for Seattle this morning\nby the (\"row boat after spending Ih*\npast week here She wus accompanied by Mrs. William Barrie, who\nis  also  of   Seattle.\nCaptain Westhury of Crawford Ray\nwas   a   city   visitor   yesterday.\nThursday afternoon the members of\ncircle No. I of Trinity Methodist\nchurch met at the home of Mrs.\nGeorge Ferguson, 722 Stanley street,\nofficers for the ensuing year were\nelected us follows; President, Mrs.\nArthur Terrtl; secretary. Mrs. George\nSimms; treasurer. Mrs, T, Negus, A\nprogram for the next meeting was\nthen arranged, and tea was served by\nthe hostess of the afternoon, who was\nassisted by Mrs. T Fleury and Mrs.\nJohn A. Irving. At Hie gathering\nwere Mrs. G. Simms. Mrs. A, E.\nAllaway. Mrs. T. Fleury, Mrs. M.\nFleming. Mrs. C. Simms, Mrs, J.\nLundle, Mrs. L. G. Campbell. Mrs, T.\nNegus, Mrs, John A. Irving, Mrs.\nHanco.k, Mrs, (.Jeorge Steed, Mrs.\nArthur Terril and Mrs, George Ferguson.\nHi Baker Street.\nPhone too\nSaturday Specials\nMID-SEASON SALE\nWilliam\nhif-h    left\nMiss Mollic lireen, daughter of Mr.\nnd Mrs. A. H. Green of Balfour, is\nattending boarding school at St.\nJoseph's   convent.\n- .w- \u2014\u25a0 .\u2014-+     \u2022\u2014I.   \u2022\u2014     \u2014\u00bb.\u00bb.\u00bb     ...\nMrs, J* P. Burns, Silica street,\nand her son, Clifford Burns, left by\nthe    Great    Northern    yesterday    for\nLIQUOR APPEAL\nCASES ARE UP\nAT CRANBROOK\nTechnical Points Are Raised\nas to the Appeals Being\nIn Order\nBOYS' SUITS\nHalf Price\nTwo-piece Suits,\nin Tweeds,\nSerges and Worsteds, all splen-\nd i d 1 y tailored.\nSizes 7 to 15\nyears. Regular\nprices $12.50 to\n$35.00. Sale\nPrices, $6.25 to\n$17.5\u00a9.\nSUIT Special for Saturday\n$35.00 Each\nUnusual values in Suits,\ncoming in the height of\nthe season. Tlie smartest Suits shown this\nSpring, made of plain\nTricotine or pin-striped\nWorsted, i n Boyish\nstyles. Coats made with\nloop fastening, or double\nbreasted, and lined\nthroughout with Crepe\nde Chene or soft Silk.\nSkirts are low waisted,\nand made wrap-around\nstyles. These are beautifully tailored, shape-\nkeeping garments, in\nsizes 16, 18 and 20.\nValues to $50.00 each. Saturday Special,\neach  $35.00\nLINEN TOWELS, 75c Pair\nExtra value in Towels. Full-size Towels made of good linen Huck, easily\nworth twice this money. Sale Price,\npair   75<\nPOTTER'S PRINTS, 35c Yard\nThe best English Print made, in light,\nmedium and dark colors and new designs. Full 32 inches wide. Sale Price,\nyard    35<\nWomen's\nGINGHAM DRESSES\nat $3.45 Each\nPorch or Beach\nDresses, made of imported Ginghams, in\nsmart styles. A range\nof patterns and colors\nin checks and plaids.\nSizes to 42. Sale Price,\neach  $3.45\nChildren's DRESSES at 98c\nMade of plain or checked Ginghams, in\nsizes G to 12 years. Sale Price, each..98f\nPRINTED SILKS\nat $1.98\nYard wide, printed\nTussah Silks, suitable\nfor Blouses or\nDresses. Beautiful designs regularly priced\nat $2.50 yard. Sale\nPrice  S1.98\nChildren's SOCKS, 4 Pairs for $1.00\nA bargain in seasonable goods. These\nare white and colors, with contrasting\ntops.    Today, Four Pairs for     SI-***}\nCfciWren's COTTON HOSE, 50c Pah\nBoys' and Girls' Cotton Hose, in fine\nor heavy ribs. Black and Brown only.\nSizes 6 to 10 years. Sale Price, per\npair   50f\nChildren's OVERALLS at 50c Pair\nKhaki Overalls for little tots, made of\ngood materials, suitably trimntfed. Sale\nPrice,   pair   - 50^\nCRAJfBROOK, B.C., Mny 9\u2014The\nhearing OX the appeal cases before I\nJudge Thompson arising out of r*--- I\ncent liquor eases In the city and i\ndistrict has commenced, the out-of- I\ntown eases being heard first, It is I\nexpected they will continue for some I\ntlnif.\nIn    connection    with    the    first    case\nsome     technical I ties     arising     out     of i\nthe    handling    of    the    papers    for    the I\nappeals   came   up.   and   occupied   some j\ntime   before   hearing   of   evidence   could\ntake    place.\nThree    informants    who    secured    the\nevidence    for    the    prosecution    are    in J\ntown   tn   present   thelt\/cases  again.\n1 it-els inn has been reservel by Judg-'\nThompson on the technical points\nraised ;is to the status of the ap- j\nMl\nT. \\V. Bailey, operator of the Star,\ntheater, is moving to Kimberley, where!\nhe has taken a position with the New!\nOrpin*-uni theater recently started up\nby Mr. Johnson Of Fernie Mr. Bailey:\nwill operate and m&IMfft the Kltnlnrley j\n'heater,   running   shows   every   night.\nKeith Watson and riyd*- ..lack in non ;\nire home after spending the past j\nyear  in  school  at   the  BQMt\nJack llesson has returned from a\nsix months' visit to his old home\nITi   Ont\u00bbiri<>.\na number of the young people to\nsee   \"A   Country  <Sirl\"  at  Trail.\nDespite the low price of eggs several hundred baby chicks are being\nshipped   in  every  week.\nHave ('line has taken over the\nduties of school janitor fn place of\nW. Skinner, who is leaving town for\na   few    nibnths.\nOeorge Lvttnn '* hack from Boss-\nland for a few days to look after\nspring   seeding.\nAs part of the \"Save the Forest*'\ncampaign the school children were\ngiven a short lecture by two government officials, and instructive and\ninteresting literature was distributed\nto   the   older   scli.'lars.\nThe weekly meetings of the CO.IT.\ngirls, hoy scouts and cubs continue\nio   be   well   attended.\nBuild Special Docks\nto Take Concentrates\nNKW WKSTMINSTI-.K, B.C.. Mav\n\u00bb.\u2014Two docks are being buill for\nhere to handle shipments of concentrates,, A freighter is ready next\nweek   to  load  3<)0() tons.\nFRUITVALE TO\nCELEBRATE ON\nVICTORIA DAY\nKnowler Is Chairman and\nKidd Secretary of Committee in Charge\nFKCITVAI.K, B.C., May 9.\u2014At R\nwell-at tended public meeting in the\nhall Saturday It was decided to hold\nthe annual celebration on Kmplre day,\nMay 24. The officers elected were:\nchairman. K Knowles; secretHry-treas-\nurer, K Kidd. Those present were\nappointed to the various commit tees\nwith  power to add to their number i\nSeveral    curs    were   required   to   take\nR. H. Maber\nTinsmith\nHoofs   ]t.-p;iire'el  or  l'ninteel  nnd\nK;ive   Tn ughfl   I'ut   l'p.\nWork Guaranteed\nOffice:    Opposite   City   Hall\nP.O.   Ban   618 Phon,  659\nFRED\nWILLIAMS\nCoal\u2014Transfer\u2014Wood\nAll    Kinds   of   Teaming,\nExpress     and     Baggage.\nOffice\u2014Opponte    City    Hall\nPHONE  655 P.O.   BOX   457\nService and Promptness\nin Shoe Repairing\nThirty yeara of experience in shoe making enahle\nus to ifive you the best of workmanship, and we use\nnone but the highest grade of materials.\nTo further improve our service we have added to\nour staff.\nWe carry a full stock of shoe polish, brushes, etc.\nPrompt attention to mail orders.\nC. ROMANO\nIDEAL SHOE REPAIRING\nManager\nNext    Hudson's   Bay   Co.\nGive Our Milk a Trial\nPhone our office or notify our driver, and we\nshall leave vou a generous sample of Kootenay\nValley Milk.\nWe simply wish to prove conclusively that we are\ndelivering milk of the highest quality, and that our\nearly morning delivery will help you in overcoming\nyour warm  weather milk  difficulties.\nIn the Really Warm Weather We Deliver Our\nMilk en fee\nPHONE 116\nKootenay Valley Milk Co-op.\nOFFICE:   FOOT   OF   VICTORIA   STREET.\nPHONE   116\nSuggestions\nfor Saturday\nDinner\nNo. 1 Steer Beef Roast\nFresh Killed Veal Roast\nFresh Killed Mutton Roast\nFresh Killed Pork Roast\nTurkey\nChicken\nFowl\nAlso all kinds of cook ed meats.\nSweet, Mustard and Mixed pickles.\nQUAUTY-CLEANLINESS\u2014SERVICE\nP. Burns & Co*, Ltd\nPHONE 50 NELSON, B.C\n 'Page\"SST\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING, MAY 10,1923\niMarkete^Fin^re\nSTOCK MARKET\nIS APATHETIC\nUncertainty Over Legislation, Particularly Tax\nBill, Is the Cause\nNEW YORK. May 9.\u2014Speculative\nInterest ln today's stock market waa\na, low ebb, prices drifting irregularly\nlower In extremely apathetic trading.\nSpeculative uncertainty over the outcome of pending legislation, particularly the tax bill, was widely retarded aa chiefly responsible for tbe\nmarket's dullness.\n\u25a0 United States Cast Iron Pipe was\nhammered down 5 points tu 83 %.\nfellow    Cab   Issues    broke    to    a   new\nISw level for the year, Chicago Yel-\now Cab closing 1% down at iQ% and\nVellow Cab Manufacturing down 2%\nat   47.\nWith the exception of Bethlehem,\nwhich closed down 1 at 4s1..., tlie\n\u25a0teels   held   firm.\nWool worth     was      the     outstanding\nan mg    spot    ln    the    specialties,    the\nd   atock   gaining   12   points   to   339 &\nand   the   new  up   3%   to  85%i\nKails  showed  mixed  changes.\nCall   money   held   steady   at   3 4   per\ncent.\n- Total  stork  sales.   G49.000  shares.\nClosing*  Quotatlona\nHigh      Low    Close\nC.P.R\t\n<Thlno    \t\nQ.M.&St.P     14*\nIpt.   Nickel        11 %\nHis.   Pac\t\nMis.   Pac.   pfd     41H\nMiami   Copper     \t\nFierce-Arrow             \t\nRock   Island   \t\nStudebaker     .....    8S%      82 4\nU.S.    Hteel     98*       97*\nWillys-Overland ....      8y4        8 4\n144\n11%\n41\n148\n16*\nH*\n11*\n13\n41%\n21%\n7\n24*\n824\n97*\n8*\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\nBiel\nConsolidated     f 34.110\nOranby    13:50\nInt. Coal\nSheep Creek Conn.\nSilver ('rent Mines\nSurf Inlet (Sold \t\nHUllleee'h     .Mllle'S\t\nBoundary   Red  Mtn.\nB.C    Silver   \t\nBoundary  Bay  \t\nEmpire  Oil  \t\nTrojan  \t\n.09\n.00%\n.04(4\n.10\n.10\n.00%\n\u25a0 \u00bb*%\n.13\n.:>.,\n.25\n.75\n.00^\n.00 eg\nTORONTO BOARD\nTORONTO, May 9.\u2014Smelters' sudden spurt on Thursday was more than\nmaintained today. A high point of\n40 was reached, and the price closed\nat 39*. The market generally looked\nbetter than It has fur the past two\nWeeks. The pulp and paper group\nwas stronger. Spanish common was\ntraded in at 1024. Abltlbl moved up\nto a high of It, nnd closed at 574.\nup 1 *. Brompton was Inactive, and\n(\u2022\"lowed 34\"\"- to 35. Cement common\nwaa mom active of listed stocks, and\nclosed at M* on purchases involving    640   shares.\nWHEAT CLIMBS ON\nREDUCED ACREAGE\nFreezing Weather in Kansas and Good News on\nWheat Bill Also Boost\nCHICAOO, May 9. \u2014 Wheat advanced today, receiving much of Its\nstimulus from an estimate of 8.000,000\nacres decrease of wheat territory this\nyear in the northern hemisphere. Likelihood of freezing tempefture in Kansas, with a possibility of the McNary-\nItaugen bill being attached to the\nrevenue bill In the senate, had a\nfurther bullish Influence. Wheat\nclosed firm, *c to 4c to lc higher.\nMay $1.04* to $1.04* and July 1,06*\nto l.Ofi* to 91.0G4, with corn *c to\nl*c up, oatB at 4c to *c advance\nand  provisions unchanged to 10c down.\nSTERLING EXCHANGE\nNEW YOKK, May 9,\u2014Sterling exchange steady at $4 344 for 40-day\nbills and |4.i|K   for demand.\nCanadian   Dollars\u201498Vic\nFrench    Francs\u2014Demand,    5.92c.\nLire\u2014Demand,    4,44c,\nGerman Marks\u2014Demand, ,0023125c\nper   billion.\nNelson Counter Kate on Sterling\u2014\n$<-444.\t\nCANADA BONDS\nMay\n-Dominion   war\nWINNIPEC\nissue  prices:\nWar Loans\u20141925. (100.25 bid; 1931,\n1100.70 bid. $100.85 asked; 1937, $102.20\nbid.  I1II.M asked.\nKefijmllng Loans\u20141928, $100 bid,\n$10015  asked.\nWar Loan lienewals\u20141927. $101.(0\nbid;   1932.   J102  asked.\nVictory 1.eeans\u2014l'.i24. $101.40 bid;\n1927. $10220 bid. ,102.30 asked; 1933.\n$104(10 bid. $1114.75 aske-d; 1934. $102.50\nbid,   $102.60   asked.   1937.   $100.75   bid.\nMETAL MARKETS\nMay   9.\u2014Foreign   bar\nMM\ny.  $47\nwxmnna chain quotations\nWheat\u2014 Open\nMay     101 \\ ,\nJuly    10S     i\nOct.     100 .'\no\u00bbt\u00ab\u2014\nMay     3814\nJuly    35%\nOct  38*.\nBarley\u2014 '\nMay     (2\\\nJuly     62fc\nOct  5SV,\nFlax-\nMay     214\nJuly    211%\nOct.    . HB'i\n\u00bb\u00bb 5414\nJuly\nOct.\nfeei\nHlfth\n102*\n103%\n100?,\n39\nM\u00ab\n38%\n\u00bb3H\n62'4\n56>j\ni'lil V\n212\\\n187',,\n6 41\n66%\nLow\n1IIH4\n10! 8\n3sv;\n39S\n381,\n62%\nii y\n56 li\n2H\n210U\n1861,\nClose\n102%\n103H\n100%\n38%\nHi\n38%\nG3H\n11%\nh i\n215'*\n212',\nNKW    YORK\nsilver,   6514c.\nI'eepper\u2014Quiet.\nKlectreelytlc\u2014Spot nnd nearby\nfuture's.   13%c to  1314c..\nTin\u2014Firmer;   spot   and   near!\nfutures.   $46.\nIron\u2014rnchanged.\nLead\u2014Steady;   spot,   $7.52   to   $7\nZlne-\u2014Steady;    Fast    St.    Louis,   spot\nand   nearby.   $5.75   to   $5.80\nAntimeenv\u2014Spot,   $8.50.\nNo   market   London.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, May 3.\u2014Eggs and po\ntatoes, fair; butter, steady; cheese\nstronger.\nCheese\u2014Finest westerns, 144c tr\nlf>c;   finest   easterns,   134c   to   14c.\nKutii-r\u2014No. 1 pasteurized, 30c t<\n30*c;   No.   1   creamery,   2'J*c,\nEggs\u2014Storage firsts. 2Bc to 28Vic\nfresh rfperials. 28c to 30c; fresh\nfirsts,   2ttc  to  27c.\nPotatoes\u2014A bag, car lots, $1.40 to\n1145.\nWml ******\nT. Rot\nB\u00abt\u00bb   m-i\nCLASSIFIED\nBdpWariri\nPetitions W.tnte\u00ab\nLett and Found\nLinstock\nMachinery\nFarm Produce\nand Mines\nMiscellaneous\nMale Help Wanted\nWANTF.Il\u2014 HOY tee Work on Hanch,\nal'le lo milk and do chores. Box\n30 4,   Kaslo.    B.C. (4545)\nIMPKRIAL BANK OF CANADA* HAS\nVacancy for Position of Junior\nClerk.     Apply   Local    Manager.\n(4522)\nFemale Help Wanted\nCAPABLE, EXPKRIENCKD SA1.KS-\nrian, (toe>d address, open for prop-\nsltteen.   local   or   territory.     Box   135.\nUna, OHM\nWANTF.il\nor    Oh\nfamily.\n\u2014  HESPONSIBI.F    WOMAN\nfor     Housework.        Small\nP.O.    Box    458. (4450)\nWANTED,   WOMAN  COOK  FOB   MINE\n\u2014.Seven    or    eight    men.    $60     month.\nboard    Bod    reeeem.      E.    J.    Edwards,\nUnited  Mines.  Alnsworth. (4518)\nWANTED\u2014A~Glrl for Ceneral Housework Mrs. E. O. White, Sandem,\nB.C. (4561)\nLADIES WANTED to Do Plain and\nLight Sewing at Home. Whole or\nspare time. Good pay. Work sent\nany distance, charges paid. Send\nstamp for particulars. National\nManufacturing Co.(   Montreal.\n(4209)\nYOI'NII\nO.IHL\nApply\nfor\n'Ieneral\nI..   S.   Ma\nlleeuse-\n\u2022k.-rsey,\n(4586)\nSituations Wanted Female\nDRESSMAKER.  .1CST f'OMETO  CITY.\nwill   go   ,'iit    by    day.      Firsi-rlass\nweerk,  ele-.  guaranleed.    rhone'   177R\n(1194)\nMiscellaneous Wanted\nWANTED     TO\nChlckein   Wire\nBI'Y   \u2014   Second-Hand\nPhone   358H1.\n(4479)\nWOULD LIKE Infeermalie,n Where or\nhow I ce.uld g,*i a 6 to 10 nipple\nheer-heettllng machine with pre'ssure,\nParliculiirs lee he sent to W, 11,\nllurieen.   clilllUvnok,   B.C. (4511)\nFor Sale or Rent\n'OR    SALE    OR    RENT-\nerty   on   Baker   Slreet.\nCailagher.\n-Store    Prop-\nApply   .1.   W.\n(4178)\nFor Rent\nSI'llMKH COTTA'IKS to Rent\nKootenay Lake, furnished; $16\nI2.r) per month. Apply to\nFraser,   Kooten:ty    Bay. (U\n\u25a016)\nDOMINION LIVE STOCK\n60 S\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\nMINNEAPOLIS,   May   9.\u2014Flour   un\nChanged.\nBran\u201411850  to  J20.\nWheat,    Nee.    1    Northern\u2014$1.1!'(,    tr\n$1.17%:    May.    $1112%;    July.    $113\\\nSeptember.   $1,12H.\nCeirn. Nee. 3 Yellow\u201470\\o to 71\\o\nOats. No. 3 White\u2014It1.,' to 444.C\nFlax,   No.    1\u2014$2,4SV,    to   $2 531,.\nYANOOUVBE.  WHEAT\nVANCtirvEli. May 9 \u2014Wheat prices,\nMerchants' exehange quotations:\nNo. 1 Neerthern\u2014Peer prompt delivery from leralrie polnls, bid, $1,04%;\nasked,   $105%.\nM\noney\nAT WORK\n\u25a0rl\u00abf Vat Important x,*ssons la Plaancs,\nBarksta, (tools, Bond, aad IarMtmaata.\nCREDIT\n<91\t\nWINNIPEC.     May     9\u2014Receipts\nIhe   yards   teeday   were   400   cattle.   5\nhugs   and   10   sheep.\nSteers\u2014Choice,   $650   to   $7;   fair\ngo.ed,   $5.75   lo   $6.50.\nButcher  Heifers\u2014Choice.  $6   to  $6 T\ng.e.ed.   $4.75   te>   $5.75.\nButcher   Ce.ws\u2014Choice.    $5    to    $5 I\ngeee.d.   $4   to   $4.76.\nBulls\u2014lioeed.   $ 2\"0   tee   $3\nOxen\u2014Oood.   $3.   to   $3.50.\nStocker      Heifers\u2014Oheelee,\n$4,50;   go.'d,   S3   to   $4.\nSteeck.T      Heifers\u2014Choice.\n$350;   geeod,   $260   t.e   3.\nFeeder    Steers\u2014Choice,    $5\nge.e.d.   $4 175.\n!! L'\n13 I\nFarms and Ranches for Sale\ncult!\nam!\n'RES    FOR    SALE    e.f    Improved\n17   ae're'S   cleared,   all    under\natleen.   water   rights   for   same,\nheeuse    and    eeultelldlngs.    ceews\nchickens,    furniture;    500    fruit\ntrees.   400   bearing.      All   geees   as   n\ngoing    e'eelie-eril.    $19,000   cash   ore'   eelie-\nhalf    ten    terms       P.    M.    Scheenberg.\n1'erry   Siding.   Slocan   Valley.   Be\n (4121)\nFOR SALE\u2014Kruft Farm, npple and\ncherry ore-hards, wilh fifteen, twenty\nor fifty acres go.ed land Ideal\nsituation.     E.   Francis.   Procter.\n(4497)\nGOOD  BUYS\n7 acres close to wharf nt Harrop;\nverv   light  clearing.\nCash.   $:t00.\nTerms, (350.\n11.25     acres,     Castlpgar;      small\nhouse:   partly   cleared.\nCash,   $600.\nTerms, $650.\n1.25 acres, next City Limits;\nSalwyn street; excellent building\nRite.\nCash,  $350.\nTerms,  $400.\n3*4   miles   from\non C.ranlte roau;   light clear-\n20    ncres.   about\ncity\nIng;   creek through  property.\nCash   $500.\nTerms,  $550,\n1   acre,  close  to city;   good  Innd;\nlight  clearing.\nCash. $150.\nTerms. $175.\nOwner,  W.  W,   FETtOCSOV,\nGllker  Work,  Nelson.\n(4342)\nFoil HKNT- My Ranch on Hall Min.-n\nItoad, nearly seven acres, owr iwn\nhundred bearing trei-s ami. small\nfruits, or will sell reasonable on\neasy terms. J. Hradshaw, Nelson.\n(448R)\nPoultry and Eggg\nHAKKKD ROCK EGOS, from Heavy\nProducers,   two   dollars   per   fifteen,\ndelivered.    T.  Roynon. (*3*?>\nHATCHINO EOQS\u2014Ferris leghorns,\nimported direct, 2G6-egg strain;\nWhite Wyandottea, excellent utility\nstock \u2014\u25a0 worklngman's price, $1.25\nthirteen, $8 hundred; also baby\nchicks. Angus Poultry Ranch, Pentlcton. <4108>\nORDERS TAKEN NOW for Ten-\nWeek-Old Barron Pullets; delivery\nmade during July. Appleton's.\nProcter,    B.C. (4273)\nSKTTING\n364R1.\nKClfiS \u2014 C.   Becker,\nPhone\n(4325)\nRIDDLE'S  HEWS LAY\nFRRR BABY CHICKS WITH EVERY\nOrder; express paid. Price for May,\n$1C.00; June. $15.00, per 100. Solly-\nFerris White Leghorns. Rose Comb\nBrown Leghorns; very vigorous\nstock, Eight-week pullets. Kiddle's\nPoultry Farm,  Salmon Arm, B.C.\n(4430)\nCity Property for Sak\nHOUDAN1\nAND\nHOtlDAKS\ntM    Winnings\nWinnipeg     - 1st,    Pen.\nBrandon  -1st,    Pen;    2ml,    Cock;\n3rd,   Hen.\nMoose .law\u2014Utility Class,  3rd.\nSt.  James  and   Asslnlbola\u2014Cocks,\n1st   and   2nd;    Pullets,    1st   and\n2nd.\n1924\nMoose   Jaw\u2014Cocks,  1st   and   2nd;\nPullets, 1st.\nWinnipeg\u2014Cncks,    l?t    and    2nd;\nPullets,   2nd.\nMAHOGANY ^ORLOFF-S\nSt.   James   and   Asslnlbola\u2014Cock,\n2nd.\nMroso   Jaw\u2014Cock,   1st;   Cockerel,\n3rd;   Pullets,   1st and  2nd.\nHATCHINO   EGOS   FOR   SALE\nThe Wimlay Poultry Yards\n1235   3rd   Avenue   N.E.\nMOOSK JAW, SASK.\nA.    J.   Armitage,    Proprietor.\nATTRACTIVE,   FritNIPHED   BUNDA-\nluw - - Immediate   possessing     Louis,\ncorner   Stanley   and   Observatory,\n (443S)\nit.i.\nur   MaiHt.   cm\n'1CU\nNe-*\u00bb   classified   columns\nTho   oaiD\nBoats and Automobiles\nFOR SALE \u2014Chevn\nTouring in good\ncaul], balance in\npayments of $33 50.\nCompany.\nF Ol t~ S A L1-%^ 10 2 iI\nCar,     Apply   P.O.   lt..x   88f>.\ni't Bahv Grand\ncondition. $260\ntwelve monthly\nNels.m  Transfer\n    (4371)\nd   T.\nI4.t;7)\nFOB HALE-\u201425-Foot Launch. 20-h.p.\nLary engine. 4 cylinder, complete.\nApply IM). Box 28, Proct.-r, B.C.\n(4476)\nFOR SALE\u2014Launch Hull, suitable for\nKurd Engine; also half bOftthoOM\nCheap for cash. ('\u2022 C. H ho lander.\nCanadian Ingersoll-Rand Company,\nBakei  Hint 14 Ti 1>] i\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nBLACKSMITH, Tool Dressing a Spe-\neialty. Fmnk James. Nelson, High\nStreet   n.-nr   Jofcn   McRa^J. (4548)\nI'l'MKP <>AK PINIXC, ROOM SUITE\nFur Sale \u2014 Nine pieces, condition\nas new. Will sell separately. Pev-\nerejl,   Perry's   Siding,  (4510)\nFOR\" SALE\u2014One Six-Hnle OvJ?iiev-Ox-\nford Range; One Electric 3-Heats\nHot  Plate.     Applv  409  Silica.     (4410)\nFOR\nSlh\nSHINGLES    WRITE    McQl'EEN,\ncrton. t43i3)\nFOR    SALi;-\ndlshes,  eti*.\n-Soda   Fountain    Complete,\nApply  Ledlngham  Hakerv,\n(4525)\nHorsi\nWANTED\u2014LAUNCH, Ahout\nPower. 4-cvcie preferred. Mus\". be\nbargain. Apply Box 4530, l>ally\nNews 44530)\nLAUNCH     FOR\nwith   4-h p.   C\nSALE  \u2014  Well     built,\n.111    engine;    first-class\nH   miles      Will    rent\nuse.     Apply   Box   |#t,\n(4581)\nRoom and Board\nWELL-FFRNISHEP\nboard,  suitable  for\n\"OM    --    With\na.    Phone   330L.\nFarms Wanted\nWANT EI*\u2014 T\ngriod farm\nprice,   full\nMiuTieapolif-\nfrom    owner\nlie.       State     c:\nBARRELS\u2014MacDonald   Jam   Company,\nNelson. * (4267)\nOLD coi'ntiTy'thrfj^piece'wal-\nnut   Bedroom   Suite.     Phone   472X.\n_    (4534)\n\"ROOFING SUPPLIES, ETC.\n2000    rolls    best    quality    2-ply\nRoofing,   $1.50   per  roll;   3-ply   extra     heavy     mineralized     surface,\nnothing   better   made   In    roofing,\n$3.00 per roll;   Shipyard Air  Hose,\nexcellent  fcr gurdens, 6c per foot;\nMixed   Wire  Nails.   $2 00   per  keg;\n50.000    feet    1-Inch    Water    Pipe,\n7c per foot, other sizes low prices.\nManU'.-i  Rope. Wlro Rope,  Canvas,\nBelting   and   lagging   Supplies.\nB.C.   JUNK   CO.,\n135   Powell   Street,   Vancouver,   B.C.\n(4223)\nNEW\u2014\nHoward\n(4MI)\nBOY'S     SADDLE,     NEARLY\nHalf     price,     leu     dollars.\nSllngsby,   Wynndel   P.O.\nTomorrow\nDS OO\nIf you knew today that tomorrow fire would destroy your\nheme\u2014you'd prepare Today.\nYou can't ktiow what will happen tomorrow. But you con\nprotect yourself against financial loss through property loss.\nFire Insurance is only one of\nthe many forms of dependable\nproperty protection we effer to\nthose who would be prepared\nfor tomorrow's eventualities.\nC. W. APPLEYARD\nPhone   269   or   Write.\n(4651)\nCLOSE IN\n$900\u20145-roomed  Cottage, rn  1  lot.\nTerms,   $300   rash,   balnnce   like\na. t. McMillan\ntell    linker   Rt\n(45311\nPhone   801\nFOR SALE\u2014Slx-Iinremed House. Hose\nIn; elone foundation. Twenty-five\nhundreel dollar,., easy term.. Apply\nBox   4179.   Dally   Newa. (4179)\nFOR IMMEDIATE SALE\nBeautiful nirdenj home; splendid\nview; containing living room, 26\nft. x 15 ft., with fireplace; dining\nroom, kitchen, pantry, hall, three\nample bedrooms with large clothes\nclosets; sewing room, bath with\nporcelain fixtures, porch. Situated\nin center of six attractive lots,\ncorner Stanley and Richards\nstreets.    Price  $4000.\nMRS. M. SANDERCOCK\nNELSON.\n(4197)\nFOR RENT\u2014Four-Roomed House and\nIl:it broom, furnished, nnd verand.ih\nand   garden,   at   r,20   Silica   Street,\n      (4540)\nTo Let\nFOR RHNT \u2014 Furnished Bungalow.\nThree bedrooms, close in. Masters,\nI'.O,   Box.   498. (4507)\nII   bedrooms.     2   lots.\nFruit   trees.\n$2000.      Terms.\nHUGH. W. ROBERTSON\nThe   Land   Man\n414   WARD  ST. PHON'K   68\n(4568)\nYoiur Ghaece\nfor a Home\nSix-room Dwelling, extra good\ncentral location. Two lots. Reasonably   priced.     $3500.     Terms.\nAgents Wanted\nPOSTAGE  STAMPS  Bought,  Sold and\nExchanged.    C.  W.  Newall,  Vernon.\n_B\u00a3 (464T)\nBEDDING PLANTS\u2014Oeranlurns, $l.is!\n$1.75 and $2.26 per dozen. Annuals,\nAsters, Stocks, Lobelias, Petunia,\nVerbena, Snapdragon, Atyuum,\nPhlox, Marigold, Zinnia, Ibo per\ndoxen. Also Panslea, 35c par doten,\nFibrous Begonias, 80c each; Coitus,\n20c; Mimulas, 16c; Marguerites,\n20c; Fuchsias, 35c to 75c; Mums,\n$1.50 per dozen; Cannas, 2$o each;\nTomatoes, 35c per doxen; Dracaena,\n26c to $1.50; Dahlias, J6c to $5o\neach. Also Ferns. j. T. Bsalby,\nBox  897,   Nelson,   B.C. (417$)\nFOR SALR\u2014A Few More Americus\nKverbearlng Strawberry Plants, ths\nbest and the heaviest producer that\nls grown, two dollars per hundred\nf.o.b.   John   Toye,   Kaslo. (4571)\nAGENTS\u2014Openings for a Few High-\nGrade Men: Studebaker Watches,\n21-Jewel timepieces of hlKhent quality, are low being sold from factory\nto consumer at savings of 50 per\ncent. Easy payments. Nationally\nadvertised. Tremendous resources\nand reputation make sales enpy.\nWrite fully, stating age, experience,\netc. Catalog free. Addresn, Studebaker Watch Company of Canada,\nLimited,   Windsor,   Ont, (4572)\nAGENTS\u2014Wonderful New Fire Ex-\ntinguinlier. Excels work of heavy\nhigh-priced devices. Price of only\n$2,00 makes an easy sale to every\nhome and automobile owner. Over\n100 per cent profit. 40,000 already\nsold. Investigate today. Pyro Fire\nExtinguisher Company, 608 Echo\nDrive,   Ottawa,   Ontario. (14G0)\nMAN OR WOMAN to travel and np-\npolnt local representatives; yearly\ncontract guaranteeing $1092 (being\n$21 weekly average) and expenses.\nExperience unnecessary. State age\nand Bt-neral qualifications, Winston\nCo.,   Toronto. (4043)\n(JLA3HIKlh.L>   aon.   oring   results.   quiCK\nly and  economically     1 ^c a   word.\nPersonal\n30,    WORTH    120,000    Wll.I.\nC-Box   866,   League,   Denver.\n(4569)\nWIDOW,\nMarry.\nCol.\t\nOENTI.HMAN. 46,\nanxious tee marry.\nToledo,   Ohio,\nWORTH\nI'lleeX  3fe\nMO.ono.\nl.eiigue,\n(4070)\nLegal Notices\nTENDERS   WANTED\nTenders will be received by the under-\nHigned up to and Including May 24\nnext for the erection only of School\nHouse at Edgewood, B.O. 1'lann can\nhe Inspected and particulars obtained\nfrom    the    undersigned.\nLowest    tender    not    necessarily    accepted.\nF.   K.   LITTLEWOOD,\nSecretnry - Treasurer,     Edgewood\nSchool   Trustees. (4554)\nPROVINCIAL  ELECTIONS  ACT\nCreston Electoral District\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that\nI .shall, on Mondav, tb<* 10th day\nof Mav, 1924, at the hour of 10\no'clock \"in the forenoon, at the Curt\nHouse, Nelson, hold ;i sitting of the\nCourt of Revision for Ihe purpose\nof revising the 1,1st of Voters for\nthe said Elector* District, and of\nhearing and determining any and all\nobjections to the retention of any\nname on the said list, nr to the\nregistration as a voter of any applicant for registration, and for tbe\nother purposes set forth in tho\nProvincial   Elections   Act.\nDATED at Nelson, B.C., this llth\nday   of   April,    1024.\nJ.  CARTMEL,\nRegistrar of Voters, Creston (Electoral   District. (4215)\nFive-room    Bungaicw,\nCentral   location.     $1600.\none    lot.\nTerms.\nFour-room    Cottage,    one    hlock\nfrom Baker street.    $1200.    Terms.\nH. E. DILL\n50S   WARD   .ST. TELEPHONE   1R0\nPRINTED stationery or all  kinds.  Tbe\n\u25a0nn|lv    f\"nw\u00ab    Prlntln*     nenartment\nLive Stock Wanted\n'.REEN OAT HAY. prime quality;\nIbmutv of Hebron potatoes; Triangle\nFertilisers; '-Black Leaf 40;\" Casein\nSpreader; Whale Oil Soap; Grass\nand t'lovi r- Seeds, etc. The Brack\nnian-Ker    Milling   Co,   Ltd.      .(4574)\nJOHN.    AT~CITY~CAB~BARN,\nhas six cooking\none French thre>\nhundred-gallon ta\nIf vou have nny\ngive  me  a  call.\nstoves for sale;\n-oven range; one\nik   in   good   shape\nf urn It ure   to   sell,\n(4550)\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\nFOR  RENT -\nApartments.\nFurnished suites.    Kerr\n(4222)\nFOR  RENT\nsuite,   Anni\nThree-roomed furnished\nle   Block. (4432)\nSUITE\u2014Ashman Apartments, 715 Baker\nStreet. (4274)^\nVernon\n(4508)\nFOB RENT\u2014Three Rooms,\nStreet.     Phone   387L1.\nLost and Found\nPOUND \u2014 ON\nApril    27,    o:\nmay    obtain\non    paying\nWard    Street.    Sunday,\njet    earring.      Owner\nt    Daily    News    Office\nr    this    ad. (4549)\nMachinery for Sale\nPORTABLE SAWMILLS. American.\nUsed mining equipment all kinds\nrebuilt. Boilers, compressors, logging\nmachinery. Send for stock list. National Machinery Co., Ltd., Vancouver. (4431)\nFOR SALE\u2014Electric Lighting Plant,\ninnipletc. Four-horse heavy duty\nFairbanks-Morse dynamo attached,\nV2 voltage, storage batteries. Apply\nP.O.   Box   28,   Procter,   B.C.        (4474)\nNursery Products\nFOR SALE\u2014Hardy Perennial Plants,\nShrubs, Fruit Trees. Rose Bushes,\netc.     W,   Mawer.   Nelson. (4331)\nWANTED -YOl'NG,   SOCND,   SMOOTH\nGelding, well   broke,   ahout   thirteen\nhundred pounds.     State   price.     J.   1>.\nPaxtoii, VS.                                        (4536)\nLive Stock for Sale\nFOR SALE, at Kitchener, B.C.\u20142\nTeams of Horses. 1 net of Harness.\nApply   to D.   StDenis,   Nelson,   B.C.\n(41li)\nFOB SALE\u2014Two Fresh Cows, pood\nmilkers; heifer calves go with them.\nCheap for cash, H. Thomlinson,\nSlocan   Park,   B.C. (4514)\nFOR SALE OR TRADE FOR GOOD\nMilch Cow. one Registered Ayrshire\nBull. 3 years old. If, DuMnnt, Kin-\nnalrd   P.O.,    Castlegar. (4513)\nFOX TERRIER^ (Smooth) \u2014 Sabine\nstrain, dog pup, bitch year old.\nPedigree and particulars, Marlborough  Kennels, Gray Creek, B.C.\n(4512)\nGOAT.      TOGOENBCRG \u2014    Excellent\nmilker,     to     freshen' June,     second\nkidding,    easily    three quarts    dally,\nhornless,    gentle,    550; also    rabbits,\nbreeders     and     young stock.       Box\n4575,   Dally   News. (4575)\nCLASSIFIED     ADS     BRING\n6ULTS   EVERY   TIME.\nRE\nLAUD   REGISTRY   AOT\n(Section 160)\nIN THE MATTER  OF  LOT 24.  BLOCK\n\" 9,    BEING    PART    OF    DISTRICT\nLOT  96,  GROUP   1,  \"HFME  ADDITION,\" NELSON    CITY, MAP 284-B\nPROOF having .been filed in my\noffice nf the loss of Certificate of\nTitle No. C1I70-A to the above-mentioned lands in the name of Margaret Campbell and bearing date th<\n14th    Mav,    1907:\nI HEREBY GIVE NOTICE of my\nintention at the expiration of one\ncalendar month from the first publication hereof to issue to the said\nMargaret Campbell a Provisional Certificate of Title in lieu of such lost\nCertificate. Any person having any\nInformation with reference to such\nlost Certificate of Title ls requested\nto   communicate   with   the   undersigned.\nDATED at the Land Registry Office,\nNelson, B.C., this 17th day of April,\n1924.\nA.   W.   IDIENS.\nRegistrar.\npublication,   April    19,\n(421H)\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\n DIRECTORY,\nElectrical\nHOWS ELECTRIC CO.\u2014\nFow.r, Llfht and Radio XnitallattOM\nAgents tor Delco Lighting Systems,\nEureka Veeuum Sweepers, Sunnysudn.\nWashing Machines, Maxda Lamps.\nDealers   In   Klectrieal   Supplies.\nOpera House Blk.   P.O. Box 911\nNelson.   B.C.                             Phone   (II\n (4477)\nChitnnev Cleanine\nW-v,\nOfficial     Ohlmn.y\n (4498)\nShoe Repairing\nIDEAL SHOE REPAIBIKO, Salt Xnd-\nson's   Bay.   C.   Romano,   manager,\n (4188)\nCall a Taxi\nNeliov  ninm  oo.\nComfortable  Oars\nOarofol Drlrsrs\nMeet   al]   trains   and   boats;   Garagst.\nMcLaughlin and Cberrolet RerTlc.     <\nnon, U                               Say or MfM\n_^ (431\u00bb)\nPrinting\nrn DAILY n\u00ab1\u2014Quality Printing\nRuling.    Loose Leaf Forms.    Ledge!\nfiheets end Binders always In stook.\nPiano Tuners\nHEDLET   W.   BEWDELL,   Expert\u2014PI\nanoH, PluyiT Pianos. Organs,    P. lit.\n        (4114)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nR.\nW.  DAWSON\u2014\nHeal Bstate, Inaurance, E.ntals.\nAnnahle Blk. P.O.   Box 733.   Phone 197.\n (4434)\nHE.    DILL,     INSUEAECE,     TAMSt\n.     AMD   CITY   PROPERTY.\n508   Wnrel   Slreet.                   Nelson,   B.C.\n (4801)\nMonuments\n-1AMPBELL      ft\nJ   MENTAL  CO.-\nen,    V. I'       'lVli-phe\nRITCHIE      HOW-\n\u25a0P. O. Box Its, Nel-\n\u25a0!,\u25a0   l'',4. (4436)\nPain-'ers and Decorators\nMDBPHTi   BROS \u2014\nAuto. Painted\nDea ets ln Wall Paper\nStore\u2014                       Auto Sho-p\u2014\n701  Baker St                            411  Hall  St.\n (4438)\nAccounting\nCHARLES P.  KIINTER\u2014\nAuditor, McDonald Jam Building.\nFlorists\nNelson.   B.C.\n (4417)\nGRIZZl\nson. c\nRIZZEI.LES   GREENHOUSE,\nand Flower designs\n(4438)\nW\"\nPlanl\nw.\n8. JOHHSOK\u2014\nFhnne   *42.     Cut   riowerm,   Pott\u00ab*#\nPlants and Floral  Emblems. (428S)\nH.    MAWER \u2014 Hardv~P\u00abrennlal\nI'lnnt t:rower, N'elsnn, RC.      H4S3)\nWholesale\nA     HA\nA*   Wl\nDate   of   first\n1924.\nPROVINCIAL   ELECTIONS   ACT\nITaUon   Electoral  District\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that\nI shall, on Monday, the liith day\nof May, IH 24, at the Ivour of 10\nn'eloek ln the forenoon, at the Court\nHouse, Ntdson, liold a silting of the\nCourt of Revision for the purpose\nof revising the List of Voters for\nthe said Electoral District, and of\nhearing and determining any and all\nobjections to the retention of ai*\nname on the said list, or to tHe\nregintration as a voter of any applicant for registration, and for the\nother purposes set forth In the\nProvincial    Elections   Act.\nDATED at Nelson, B.C., this llth\nday   of   April,    1024.\nJ. CARTMEL.\nRegistrar of Voters,  Nelson Electoral   District. 14214)\nMACDONALD ft OO.'S Ohmnh and Provision\nMerchants. Importers of Twia, Coffeea,\nSpices. Dried Emits, Maple and Fancy\nNelson,   DC. (4439)\nEngineers\nGtee* Bro.., \u00bbur(fe0 ^\nNELSON. B.O. _.___\u201e\nOITH, AND MININO E\u00bbOI\u00bbM*M\nB. 0\u201e Alberta and Dominion\nLand   Surveyors.\nCrown Orant Agents.     Sins M\"\"*****\nH.\nKlisl\nD.\nDAWSON,\nMining    and\nl,and\nCIvU\nSurveyor,\nEngineer.\n(4441)\nAssayers\nE\nWIDDOWSOJT,   Pox   A1108, Nel-\non, B.C Stanelard western '***$!\u00a3.\nW.SooTdL.Bs^7prw....r \u00bb*\u25a0 \u00ab\u00a3\u00ab*-\nMart,  Vernon stre\u00ae^3)\nFuneral Directors\nUiffl    victoria\nNight   Phon\nU      Phone    BI&\n(4444)\nStandard Tnrnltnra\nCo.. Undertaker*.\nFuneral Director**\nAuto hears**, up-to-\ndate chapel. Best\nnerv.ee. Price!\nreasonuhte.   (4445)\nJienj    men    complete    the arranfe-\nm%a%   for   the   pnrohaee,   and aajr,   \"I'll\nmall   ro\u00ab   mr   cheek.\"     The merohant\nla     entirely     eetlefled     with inch     a\nstatement.\nWe hear so often and so much\nabout graft and dishonesty that we\nnomef I men overlook the fact that utter\nfaith In men Is the keynote of modern bunlne**-\n'How much actual canh do you use\nJn \u25a0 your huelneea each day? Prob-\natfty very little. Cliecka largely take\ni h# place of money; paper money la\nmuch used, and lin rxlntence Impllee\nfaith In the government or the bank-\nlu ay a tern. What a nuisance It would\nb# to Itart off on a trip wight.-d\nd-'*n by gold and sliver enough to\nf tn-'i ii' \u2022\u25a0 tha journey!\nWr write little allps of paper which\nran    be   quite   Hafely   and   conveniently\ntl.   and   we   receive   similar   allpa\nour   debtors.      To    the   clearing\nla   left   the   task   of   balanc\nartoua   accounts   and   settling   up\nlittle    cash    as    must    actually\ne hands,\nh   faith    l\u00bb   called   cn-dlt.   snd    i;\nt   rook   on   which    modern    business\nIs   built\nyMfht.   UK   Aaaoclated   Editors)\nBRINGING UP FATHER        -\n .  \u2014;\u2014 \u2014:\u2014        Bv Geor'e McMamu\nMi\n U96\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING,-MAY 10,1931\n' Pa*\u00bb Seven*\n\u00ab*\u2014\n=\u00bb\nMRS. CRANKER GIVES\nTANLAC FULL CREDIT\n\"At ft Stomach Medicine and\nToftk, Tanlac Is Certainly\nWonderful,\nVie Lady\nSays Brock-\n\u25a0 \u2022'Mlng her voice to the thou.Hande\n\u25a0who are praising Tanlac for the recovery of their health and -strength,\nMrs. Margaret Cranker, 84 Louis\nfctrett, Brrckvtllo, Ont.. says:\n\"Tanlac li such a grand, good med-\nJfi.i* and has done so much for me\nth.-. I will praise it. Following a\nU of typhoid fever, two years ago,\n1 vaa Just a shadow of myself and\nremained   so   weak   I   couldn't   walk\nacross the floor. Stomach palna and\nbackache tortured me and I was al-\nmeat frantic from nervousness.\n\"My husband, who had used Tanlac\nwith fine results, persuaded me to\ntry lt, too, and lt proved to be just\nwhat I needed. Six bottles helped\nme back to health and strength, and\nI alao gained 12 pounds. That waa\ntwo years ago, and I have felt fine\never since. As a stomach medicine\nand tonic Tanlac ts certainly wonderful.\"\nTanlac is for sale by all good druggists. Accept no substitute. Over\n40  Million  tattles sold.\nTanlac Vegetable Pills, for constipation, made and recommended by\nthe   manufacturers   of   TANLAC.\nNews of Sport\nTHREE PIRATES\nORASS GREENS\nFALLTO BRAVES FOR EVERY HOLE\nIS SEASON AIM\nBoston, in Only National\nLeague Game, Wins on\nSoaked Field\nNATIONAL     LEAGUE      8TANDING\nWon    Lost   ret.\nROSEBERY FILLY\nEASILY TAKES\nLADIES'CLASSIC\nPlock Finishes Length and\na Half Ahead of Favorite\nMumtaz Mahal\nLONDON. May 9.\u2014(By Canadian\nPress Cable.)\u2014Lord Roseberv, dean\net thd English turf, added one more\nfo hla list of victories In the classics.\n-When his chestnut filly. Plack. going\nto the post at odds of 8 to l against,\nWon the One Thousand guineas, over\nthe Rowley Mile course at Newmar-\nIket today. In easy fashion from a\nHeld  of  16.\nH. H. Aga Khan's Mumtaz Mahal.\nfwho went to the post a hot favorite\nni ti to f. against, finished second, a\nlength And a half behind the winner.\nStrait Lace, owned by Kir Edward\nHult.ui, the second favorite, at 7 to 2\nagainst, was  third,   beaten   by  half  a\nCANADIAN jn   PACIFIC\nlength, with Mrs. Whitburn's Mink,\nfourth. The time w^s 1 minute\n39   2-5   seconds.\nIndian   Filly   Leads   at   Start\nWhen the barrier ascended, Mumtaz Mahal slipped into the lead, followed bv Zoaa. Plack, Maid of Bath,\nEton Wick. Kilemny. Strait Lace\nand Mink, in the order given, for the\nfirst half mile.\nElliott then took Plack up into\nsecond place, attended by Sralt Lace.\nAt the Bushes. Mumtaz was j-till\nclear of Plack. but at Ablnst'in bottom, Plack Joined Issue with tho Aga\nKhan filly, and raced into the lead\n100   yards   from   home.\nHalcyon, Maid of Bath, K-nza, Golden\nEmblem, Kilmeny, Eton Wick, Trelze.\nChronometer. Tuscar Rock, Cleone.\nCarmel  and (Jagool also   started.\nElliott, who ha_ the mount on the\nwinner was the leading Jockey last\nseason, displacing Steve Donjghue.\nwho had been at the head nint) years.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nAll   games  postponed   for  rain.\nSAILINGS\nNEXT SUMMER\nTo Europe\nTO     iOCTHAHPTON CHiBSOCma-\nHAMBUBO\nH\u00aby 7. June \u00bb   July 2.  Kmp of Srotland\nJuno 18, July 11, Aug. 13.. Emp.of Franco\nTO     \u25a0OOTHAMrTON-CILERBOUBO-\nAWTWERP\nApr. JO, M\u00bby 28, Juno  26   . . .Mlnnedos.\nMiy   14,  June   11,  July  8    MellU\nTO   BLI.1'A8T-QX.A800W\nMay  1.  M\u00aby \u00bbS.  June  26 Me.mir.nia\nMay   8,   June   7,   July   4    Marloeh\nMay   15.   June   12     Montlaurler\nM\u00aby   22.   June   19.   July   17   ...Marbure\nTO     UVEUOOI,\nMay  2,   May   30,   June   27   ...Monlroyal\nMay   3.   May   31,   June   28,   ...Montreal\nlj\u00aby   \u00bb,   June   \u00ab,  July   4    Montcalm\nM\u00bby   16.  June   13,   July   11   ..Montrose:\nMay   23,  Jeine  21).  Julv  18   . . .Montclare\nTO  SOUTHAMPTON BELFAST-\nGLASGOW\nJuly   \u00bb     Montlaurlei\nBerthing sheets now open for abovt\nBailings and reservations are helnr\nIliads. Pull particulars may bo secured\nfrom Local Agents everywhere, oi\nWrits\nJ. S. Carter\nSports of\nall Sorts\n\u25a03\nTummy Connolly has had 25 years'\nservice as a major league umpire.\nMarshall Field of Chicago has accepted the mastership of the West-\nmealh hounds in London. He Is the\nsecond American to become a master\nof foxhounds in England.\nIvy Wlngo, catcher of the Cincinnati Reds in the National league,\nand \"Ked\" Wlngo, pitcher for the\nDetroit Tigers, are brothers. The\nboys are natives of Norcross, Ga.\nQulntin Romero Rojas, the new\nheavyweight of Chile, is 28 years of\nage, six feet tall and weighs 198 lbs.\nOut of 17 fights In which he has\nengaged he  has scored  14  knockouts.\nD. W. Pell of Wllliamsport, Pa.,\nholds the world's record In killing\nthe biggest Osborn caribou. The\nanimal, brought down in the Casslar\ndistrict of British Columbia, had an\nantler spread of 55 Inches, length 56V4\nInches and 38  points.\nNew   York    14\nCincinnati      13\nBrooklyn      10\nChicago      10\nPittsburgh    10\nBoston         7\nPhiladelphia      5\nSt.    Louis        5\n11\n12\nTM\n-t-84\n.526\n.522\n.455\n.538\n.313\n.278\nCan't   Stop   Boston\nPITTSBURGH. Miiy 9.\u2014Three\npitchers of Pittsburgh were una hie\nto turn back the Boston team today played on a field soaked by two\ndays'   rain.   Score: R.   ft   E.\nBoston     10    14      2\nPittsburgh         7    13      8\nBtitterieB\u2014Stryker. McNamara, Gen-\newich and O'Neill; Morrison, Stone.\nSteineider, Lungren. May nnd Gooch,\nSchmidt.\nCincinnati-St.   Louis,   rain.\nOthers   not  scheduled.\nGolf Club Grades and Seeds\nNew Ground to Lengthen Present Course\nADD TO LOCKERS\nAND THE KITCHEN\nEntertaining of Trail and\nRossland First Week in\nJune Includes Dance\nDELANEY   BEATS\nCLIFF    KRAMER\nST. PAUL. Minn., May 9\u2014Jimmy\nDclanoy. St. Paul light-heavyweight,\nadministered a severe beating tn Cliff\nKramer, also of St. Paul, ln a 10-\nround   bout   here tonight.\nCLASSIFIED    AD8     BRING\n8ULT8   EVERY   TIME.\nRE-\nA pure tonic\nbeverage\u2014\n\"Purity from first to last\" is the\nslogan of Cascade brewing \u2014 even\nthe bottles are sterilized. Everything possible is done at B. C.'s\nmodel brewery to give you the best\nbeer that Canada's choicest barley\nand hops can produce.\nINSIST on \"Cascade\"\u2014\nthe better beer \u2014 at the\nGovernment Vendor's.\nVANCOUVER\nBREWERIES\nLIMITED\nSAINTS WIN\nFIRST GAME\nDefeat Corinthians Two to\nNothing in Opening City\nLeague Contest\nBy a score of two goals to nothing the iiaint Saviours' footbRll team\nproved winners in the first city ItUM\ngame of the year at the Recreation\ngrounds wsterday afternoon. The\nCorinthians, who opposed the Saints,\ndid not field a strong lineup and had\nlittle   of   the  play.\nA good sized rrowil took in the\nsport which was followed with much\ninterest. From present Indications\nthe league contest this year will be\nclose, as all teams have strnng lineups. The olay is for the custody.of\nThe   Dally   News   cup.\nThe    Te-r-ms\nSaints\u2014Kinnahan. Rovnon. Hepher,\nSimpson. Rradley. C. StDenis. Lcem-\ning, Rolton. Needham, Atkinson and\nRing rose.\nCorinthians\u2014Notman,  Tylor,  Oliver,\nRen we] I,   Ratholaniew,    Morris.   Diuve,\nMoCrone.   Dawson,   Ward.   Graves.\n.    \u25a0\u00bb\t\nStates Davis Cup\nTeam li Selected\nNEW YORK, May 0.\u2014Tho Dav,a\ncup committee of the United States\nLawn Tennis association today an-\nnoun'^d that tho Cnited Stated Olympic men's tennis team would consist\nof R. N. Williams, u, Philadelphia,\ncaptain; Vincent lik-hards, Yonkers.\nNY.; Francis T, Hunter of Reckley,\nW.Va., and Watson M. Washburn,\nNew York.\nThe women's: Miss Helen Mills.\nFterkeloy, Ca!.. national champion:\nMiss Eleanor Doss. New York; Mrs.\nM. 'Z. .lesson, Wilmington, Del., and\nMrs. Hazel Wig hi man, Uoston, as\ncaptain.\nA billiard rhampion ls subject to\nchallenge every .10 days. All championship   games   are   for   ISM   points\nplaying   QftO   prints   p.'r   night.\nBefore the season is out. Nelson\nGolf and Country club directors expect to have grass greens for every\none of the nine holes at the local\nlinks.\nThese grass greens will replace\nthe few remaining sand greens, and\nwill further add to the attractions\nof   the   Nelson   course.\nMany improvements have already\nbeen made this spring. The locker\nroom has been enlarged, and plans\nare now under way for adding to the\nsize of the kitchen, which has become too small for tbe requirements\nof the club. This Improvement is\nbeing financed by the women mem\nhers of the club.\nImprove Fairways\nNew ground, which will enable\nthe course to be lengthened and reduce the number of places where the\nfairways cross, has been graded and\nseeded, and numerous other Improvements are being made to the greens\nand fairways. The professional, I*at\nBarrett, has Just completed some\nnice little sand traps at some of\nthe greens, which will catch the unwary player who fails to hit 'em just\nright.\nPreparations are being made for\nthe matches with Trail nnd Rossland\nwhich will be held during the week\nend of June 7. Part of the enter\ntalnment will probably consiBt of an\ninformal dance at the cluh house.\nVisitors are expected to arrive Friday, June 6. and play will commence\nSaturday   and   continue .Sunday.\nTennis has commenced at tbe golf\ncourts, players .stoUng.- -tlie (tom*\nfor so early in the season are In ex\n(\u25a0optionally   good   condition.\nCHAMPIONSHIP\nIS AT STAKE IN\nTONIGHTS BOUT\nAllibone and Falisconi to\nBattle Fifteen Rounds;\nPrelim Card Looks Good\nHAIR STAYS\nCOMBED, GLOSSY\nMillions Use It - Few Cents-\nBuys Jar at Drugstore\nThta adTertiiemant Is not published or displayed by tho Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of British Columbia.\nEven obstinate, unruly or Shampooed hair stays combed all day In\nany style you like. \"Halr-Orocrn\"\nis a dignified combing cream which\ngives that natural gloss and well-\ngroomed effect to our hair\u2014that final\ntouch to good dress both ln business\nand on social occasions. \"\u2022Hair-\nGroom\" Is greaseloss; also helps grew\nthick, heavy, lustrous hair. Beware\nof greasy,  harmful Imitations.\nMACDONALD'S\nElite Cut\n^\nfor those Smokers\nwho like their tobacco\nCut Fine or who\nroll their own\nMACDONALD'S BncGi\nV\\. Lb 15^\n\u00a3\u00a3\nV\nernon\nB\nJick\nStan\nParker    vs.    Young    Wilson\nBantam   We.ghts\nII Fereno vs.  Fat  Defero\nGuess    Waiqhts\nKilderman   vs.   Ed   Psrker\nLight    Weights\nSemi-fioal\nAllibone    vs.    A.    Falasconi\nMain    Bjut\n15\nRounds\nA peppy boxing cird is scheduled\ntonight at the Nelson Recreation club\nwhen a 15-round go between Stan\nAllibone of Nelson and Abbie Fal\nasconi, the Drumheller Kid. wul com\nplete a 24- round card. Besides the\nmain bout three bouts of three\nrounds each are scheduled. The main\nevent is        for the Kootenay\nlightweight   championship.\nBoth lads completed thoir training\nyesterday with light workouts and\nare declared by their managers to M\nIn the best ot condition. Tommy\nItogers, local welterweight, who has\nhad charge of Alllbone's training,\nstates that Allibone is ln the best\ncondition  he has  yet   been   In.\nJack Cullen has been pjitting l'al-\nasttoni through bis training and\ncertainly has his boy stepping lively.\nFalasconi has boxed lo rounds daily\nduring the past week and Is ln the\npink. Joe Holland will referee the\nbout.\nAn excellent card of preliminaries\nhas been drawn up with Kilderman\nand Parker in the semi-final bout,\nVerrmn Parker will meet Young Wilson In the second bout. In the last\nmeeting of these twrf Wils6n took\nthe SBiftft. ^\nThe opening bout will be more or\nle\u00bbs a good show. Fereno and Defero being the city's champion fat\nboys. They have In the past shown\nlocal   BUft scyne   great   ejee item ent.\nThe first bout Is scheduled for 3:30\n-oVIusk;- The****- wM\\ \u2022Uta ma^e^ne*^*\nbetween the bouts,\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nAll games postponed, rain.\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nAt   Los   Angeles\u2014 R  H.  B.\nOakland     5     7     2\nLos Angeles     1     6     1\nBatteries\u2014Krause and Read; Myers,\nKamsey and  Hillings.\nAt Han Francisco\u2014 R.   K.  E.\nVernon       2     9\n\u25a0Ml    Francisco        3     3      1\nVernon     2     9     1.\nBatteries\u2014Christian and D. Murphy;  Shea and Yelle.\nAt Salt Lake\u2014 R   H.  E.\nSacramento     11    14      1\nSalt    Eut     IT    18      2\nBatteries\u2014Thompson, Vinci, Yel-\nlowhorse and Koehler; Stroud, Mul-\ncahy,  Kallio and Cook, Jenkins.\nAt   Seattle\u2014 R   H.   E.\nPortland   2    10      4\nSeattle       3     9     0\nI tat t eries- !.*\u2022 verenx and Daly;\nGregg and Baldwin.\nNEW YORK CLAPS\nBAN ON GREB, TOO\nNKW YORK. May a.\u2014Tim gates of\nsuspension which barred Harry Qreb,\nmiddle-weight titleholder, and Kid\nNorfolk, colored middleweight, from\nactivity In Massachusetts for six\nmonths, were lowered against them\nln New York state today.\nSuspension was taken by the state\nathletic commission after learning\nthe reasons for the disqualifications\nln Massachusetts. The punishment\nbars Greb from fulfilling his contract\nto meet Jack Delaney In tne milk\nfund show here J'yit 27.\nThis is the Last Day of this\nSpecial Event\nWe have made careful plans for a big day's business today, and have selected values that\nwill have a wide appeal to you.\nNew-Fashioned Sweaters and\nCardigans for Ladies\nLOW CUT, SIDE FASTENINGS, with\nroll collar, and fastened with two buttons. Back and sleeves plain. The\nfronts are novelty stitch. These are\nmade in All-Wool and Silk-and-Wool.\neach  ' \u00abp4.1\/5 TO \u00abp7aa7U\nLast Day for Coats and Suits in an\nOutpouring of Special Values\nCOATS  $12.?5 to $25.00\nSUITS  \u25a0J25.00 to ?4S>.50\nSee these  today and get the\nbenefit of the savings.\nSilk Waists and Jumpers\nA NEW SHIPMENT, in all the most\nwanted colors of navy, saxe, grey,\nsand, pearl, white, etc. Exceptional\nvalue.\nEach\nIn Pleated Flannel,.\nPrice\t\nIn Wool Crepe,\nfine texture \t\n$6.95\n$7.95\n$3.50 to $3.95\nJust What Is Wanted\n\u2666NEW-DBLIVBRY of Pleated Skirts, in\nfawn,  reindeer,  cocoa and grey.\n* Only, White All-Wool Blankets\nWHIPPED ENDS. Manufacturers' seconds. Weight from 3 lbs. to 3 lbs.\n12 ozs. each. (J\u00bbQ   JQ\nA real bargain, each  \u00abpO.*rr\u00ab\/\n30 Only, Large-size Colored Striped\nBath Towels\nFRINGED    ENDS.      Heavy    spongy\nweave.    Size 29x60 inches.    Regular\n$1.25.\nSale  Price,  each  \t\nGolf Cluh Special\nAUCHTERLONIE GOLF CLUBS\u2014\nPutters, Mashies, Midirons, Niblicks\nand Drivers. Regular, $5.00 Clubs.\nSpecial Today Only, (J\u00bbQ (TA\neach  \u00abJ>*3a*Jl\/\nShort Ends of Linoleum\nONE AND TWO YARDS WIDE\u2014\nLengths varying from 2 to 9 square\nyards.   All one price, Qft\/\u00bb\nper sq. yard   \u00bb\/OC\n98c\nSattifday\u2014Last Day Sale Specials\nNegligee Shirts for the Men With\nSmall JVecfcj\nSIZE 14 AND UMi ONLY\u2014Good\nquality, neat stripe patterns, made\nwith soft French double <J_-t PA\ncuffs.    Each    ipl.tlU\nMen's Flannelette Night Shirts\nGOOD  QUALITY\u2014Full  cut  and   fast\ncolors. (1\u00bb-|   f_t'\nEach  (Pl.j\/U\ni Boys' Suits\nTHERE  ARE   STILL  A  FEW  Boys'\nTweed   Bloomer   Suits,   in   All-Wool\n$9.75\nEnglish   Tweed.      Grey   and   fawn\nshades.    Sizes 6 to 12\nyears.   Per suit \t\nALSO    Boys'    Tweed    and    Corduroy\nBloomer Suits.    Sizes 10, 11 and 12\nyears.\nSpecial Price, suit ..\n$6.49\nMen's Suits\nDON'T MISS THIS OPPORTUNITY\nto buy an All-Wool English Serge\nSuit. Indigo dye, and well tailored,\nin a conservative three-buttoned style.\nA good Business Suit\nfor \t\n$27.50\nGrocery Department\nMACKAY'S  CREAM  OF  BARLEY\u2014\nPkg 35<\nLIBBY'S FRUIT SALAD\u2014No. 2 tins,\npjich -\\%s\\\u2014^\nSMALL    WHITE BEANS \u20144     lbs.\nfor  25^\nPRUNES\u2014Large, 40-50. Per lb. 20\u00ab*\nB.C. GRANULATED SUGAR\u2014\n20-lb.   sack    $2.20\nB.C.  GRANULATED  SUGAR\u2014\n10-lb. sack  fl.15\nFRESH  STRAWBERRIES\u2014Bskt.35<\nFRESH BLACK GRAPES\u2014Lb 50<\nFRESH  TOMATOES\u2014Lb    40<\nFRESH  ASPARAGUS\u2014Lb.   35<\nFRESH RADISHES\u20143 bunches...25**-\nFRESH  CUCUMBERS\u2014No.   1.\nEach   30*\nHu%?\u00abs TJatJ (IfcmfJatiB\n\\emm.*\u00b1 *    -\u2022* ' \u25a0**--\nCONDENSED\u00ab ADS ORDER FORM\nUl. thlt blank on which to writ, your oondMit.d  ad.,  on.  word   In  aaoh   apaoa.   Enoloa.   man*!\nardar or chtok and mail diroot to Tha  Daily  Nawa, Nalaon, B. C\nRatal    Ona  and   a   half oant a  word   oaoh   Inaartlon,  alx  eonaaoutlva  inaartlana far  pHea  rf  faar\nwhan   aaah   aooompanloa   ardor.   Minimum,   26a,   Eaoh initial, figura, dollar signs, otc, count aa ana\nttord.   Na charge loaa than 60 conto.\nPlaaio publish tha advartlaamant balaw \u2014..\u2014 tlmsa, for whloh 1 ancloso (\u201e.. mwmsm\n1\n\u2022\nH dsslrsd, ropllos may ba addraaaad to b\u00bb\u00bb numbara  at  Tha   Dally   Now.  Offlaa,   If  roods,  ar*\nla bs mallad anolooo Its axtra ta aavar MM af aaataga and allow flva worda antra far bm naimbar.\n \t\nPage EigKI\n:\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,r SATURDAY MORNING, MAY 10,1924\nA\nKOOTENAY\nSUNSHINE\nShows  up   that   faded,   worn   Rug.\nTHE ARK\nHaa In rtoclc some new patterns ln\nWilton, Axmlnster, Brussels and\nIdnoleum Rugs. We want you to\ncome and see them. N\u00a9 trouble to\n\u2022how  the  goods.    Pricei  right.\nJ. W. HOLMES\nPhons  634\nSO*   Vernon   Strast\nNew\nArrivals\nIn Fish\nFrosh Shipment of Canned Fi\u00abH\nDirsct    From   Norway\nFat Herrings ln  Tomato Sauce,\nP\"   \u00ab\u25a0>    - 26^\nBoneless Kippered   Herrings,   ln\nTomato Sauce, per tin 25^\nFresh     Mackerel,     In     Tomato\nSauce,   per   tin    35<*-\nFat Mackerel, In Tomato Sauce.\nPer \"n  - 35*\nSardines,  N'.B.   Brand,\nper tin 20* 2 tins for 35\u00abl\nSardines,  King Oscar.\nper Un 20* \u2022 <ins for 35^\nSardines,  Brunswick.\n3 tins fcr  \u2014 _ 25^\nHead Lettuce,  per  lb -lOt*\"\nFresh Tomatoes, per lb 40*\nKhubarb,  2  lbs.  for 25*\nSpinach,   per   lb 15*\n3  lbs.  for   \u201e 40j\u00bb\nJ. A. IRVING & CO.\n613  BAKER ST. NELSON\nThs Great   Supply   Houss\nMatinee, 2:30 p.m.\nNight, 7 and 9 p.m.\nRex   Beach's   Story   of   a\nMan's Love  for a  Boy\u2014\nYour last ehance. See this\npicture and  save yourself\nregrets.\nFLYING\nFINANCE\nA   bear   for   speed   and\nlaughs.\nInternational News\n\"WHITE EAGLE\"\nAt Matinee Only.\nCOMING   MONDAY\nA.    S.    M.    Hutchinson's\nNovel\n\"THIS FREEDOM\"\nAn All-British Production.\nEYE\nDon't   nenlect   your   ONLY   pair\nof   Eye*.\nHava them examined regularly.\nEyae ohanne, but lent** don't.\nSatisfaction    guaranteed.\nBecause of having our own\ngrinding plant, we can practically give you a day service\nin repufrH. nnd replacing of\nbroken   lenses.\n-SERVICE\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOPTOMETRIST\nREMEMBER\n83 1-3 Per Cent Saved on\nSpectacles.   See\nHIGGINBOTHAM\nWe Can Supply You With\nVegetable and Flower Seeds,\nDutch Sets,\nSeed Potatoes, etc.\nFLEMING'S STORE\nFAIRVIEW\nDEVELOPING   AND PRINTING\nBY  OUR SPECIAL\nGLASSINE FINISH\nThis fine spring weather\nmakes ideal conditions for taking   Snapshots.\nUp sure and have your films\nprinted by cur special process of\nGlassine  Finishing\nwhich   gives   the   highest   possible   glossy   finish   to   prints.\nA trial will convince and satisfy.\nMail   or   Leave   Ua   Your   Next\nFilm\nCanada Drug &\nBook Co.\nLimited\nNSLSON,   B.C.,\n-HAS IT-\nDEPENDABLE\nGROCERIES\nECONOMY-SERVICE\nUl\nPHONE 235\nCLOVERDALE   BUTTER\u2014II   la\nI!' eeel.       l'er    lb 4Q\u00a3\nMACARONI \u2014I'ucilni'a      Ko.-i.iy\n'\u2022*\"\u25a0\u25a0    - i'\"1 25<\"\nONTARIO   HONEY\u2014\n-\"!\"\u25a0     !'<\"-   Un        75<*\nDEL   MONTE   PRUNES\u2014Kxlra\nquality. I'.r lb., 15<., _QC\nJELLY    POWDERS\u2014Nabob.\nI   |.kg\u00ab.   for 25<.\nDUNBAR   SHRIMPS\u2014Fine   for\nsiiliul.s. l'er lin . . 2S<*\nWAX    OR    GREEN     BEANS\u2014\nNj tin   ao,*\nWHITE   WONDER   SOAP\u2014Tli\"\nbeat   value   In   laundry   Soap,\n1*  '\u00ab\"-\u00bb  for $1.00\nSEED POTATOES\u2014Karly Ohio.\nran.   A.     100   lbs $3.00\nFRE8H   FRUIT, VEGETABLES\nMothers' Day to\nBe Celebrated\nHere Tomorrow\nTomorrow is Mother's day, and will\nai   or\n'vices.\nbe celebrated *\u25a0 over tbe continent\nby special services, the sending of\nwhite flowers ;fnd ln many other\nways. Advertte'iemenlg urge that\nMother be wrltton to on this day. if\non  no other.\nNelson's churches will make reference to the day, during their services.\nBOXING\n15 ROUNDS\nSTAN. ALLIBONE of Nelson\nVS.\nA. FALISCONI of Bonnington\nThe Drumheller Kid\nFor the Lightweight Championship of the Interior\nof British Columbia.\nPRELIMFNARIES\nYOUNG WILSON vs. V. PARKER\nBantams\u20143 Rounds\nBILL FRENO vs. C. DEFER0\nHeavies\u20143 Rounds\nED PARKER vs. J. KELDERMAN\nWelters\u20143  Rounds\nNelson Recreation Club\nSATURDAY, MAY 10th\nDoors Open 9 p.m. First Preliminary, 9:30 p.m. sharp\nReserved Ringside Seats,  $1.00; Circle, $1.00;\nBalcony, 50c.\nA. G. LAMBERT CO., Ltd.\nManufacturers   of   and   Dealers   in\nALL     KIND8     OF     LUMBER     AND     BUILDING     MATERIALS,\nSHINGLES,    LATH,    MOULDINGS,    WINDOWS,    DOORS,    COAST\nEDGE   GRAINED   FLOORING   AND   FINI8H,  AND   BEAVER   AND\nWALL   BOARDS\nDrawer 1068\nPhone  No. 82\nNelson, B.C.\nEnlish Worsted\nWith Silk Decorations\nThese are absolutely the best Worsteds made.\nHand-picked from the newest and best. Made in\nEngland.\nThere is always Economy and Satisfaction in\nGood Clothes.\nJAMES   H.   CLELLAND\n\u25a0\nLadkn' and Gents' Tailor\nOPERA HOUSE BLK., WARD ST., NELSON, B.C.\nA. S. HorswiD & Co.\nPhone 121\nWe carry a full line of\nFancy end Staple Groceries. All goods guaran-\nteed of the best quality\nand price.\nFinest Pctatoes, sack     $2.50\nRhubarb,   3   lbs.   for    JSSc\nSpanlch.   a   lb ...\u00bb XCnt\nBoneless   Ham,   lb.   , _&*t\nNew-I-ald    Eggs.    doi.    .   _&\u00a3\nNavel   Oranges,   from   \"2*5^\nLarge   Lemons,   doz -iOtt\nPROMPT   DELIVERIES\nFRENCH    FLIER\nMAKES    CALCUTTA\nRANGOON, India, May 9.\u2014Lieut. P.\nDoisy, French aviator flying from\nParis to Tokyo, arrived today from\nCalcutta.\nCLASSIFIED     ADS     BRING\n\u2022ULT8   EVERY  TIME.\nRE\nNelson Laundry will\nbe closed after Saturday, 10th.\nWill nil those who owe accounts to the Nelson Steam\nLaundry kindly settle up before\nthe end of May.\nFancy Cushion Covers and Table Runners Cleaned\nH. K. FOOT\nHigh-Class    Dyer   and   Cleaner\nFAIRVIEW   -   NELSON,   B.C.\nFIRE!! INSURANCE EIRE\nII1\n\u2022 \u2022\nAre you fully protected against financial loss in case\nthe FIRE FIEND visits your home or business?\nInsure Today\u2014Don't Pat It Off Any Longer\nCALL OR PHONE 135 FOR RATES\nCHAS. F. McHARDT\nREAL ESTATE                                                     BONDS\nINSURANCE\u2014Fire,   Accident,   Life                                      PHONE\nin\n.\n\u25a0\nWe Can Help You to Keep Out Flies!\nSCREEN DOORS\nThree  qualities  in  various   sizes.\nADJUSTABLE SCREEN WINDOWS\nTo fit any window.\nWIRE CLOTH\n24 to 48 inches wide.   Any length.\nWood-VaDance Hardware Co., Ltd.,\nWHOUWAJ.B\nNtUOM, BA\nBBtAIL\nOur Stock of\nSEWER TILE\nIs Complete.\nNELSON PLUMBING & HEATING CO.\nCOR. KOOTENAY AND BAKER NEL80N, B.C.\nLocal Vegetables\nQreen   Beans.   Ib -25*\nSpinach,   2   lbs.   for  2JK*-\nAsparagus,    lb -35*\nGreen Unions, 3 for  10*\nCabbage,    lb gj*\nRhubarb,   lb XO*\nRadishes.   3  for   25^\nCucumbers,   each,   30*,   35\u00a3\nHead  Lettuce,   lb 45f\nLi'af  Lettuce,   lb     40c\nKresh   Tomatoes,   lb 15>f\nStrawberries,   box 35*\nPotatoes\nCarmen No.  1, per 100... $2.75\n11\nPhone 10.   If Busy, 193\nCosmopolitan Style\nIn Summer Suits\nSUITS  in. those   smartS\nconservative styles Whk\nalone compiand the appro?\nof   all   werl-dr-essBd   meta-\nSuits which  proclaim the\nwearer a man of fashion, >\na   fad-chaser\u2014Suit*   whin\naccept the newest style not\nwithout hysterics\u2014Suits wHJ\npoise   and    assurance\u20141\nsort of Clothes that you\nwear as long  as you ?\nwithout going \"out of da\n$25.00,   $80.00,\n935.00 to *$45.00\nYOUR MONEY'S WORTH\nOR YOUR MONEY BACK\nREAD THE ADVERTISEMENTS\nKeep Up With Progress\nLAST\nTHE\nSHOWING TODAY\nAND\nl\/iptnr      The Popular\nw 11> t UI Piano * Accordianist\nBOYS and GIRLS\nVICTOR will play several selections for\nyou at the\nMATINEE,2:30\nEvening\u20147 and 9:15 p.m.\nVICTOR wai play at 9:15.\nSTARLAND\nCOMING MONDAY\u2014\"HER TEMPORARY HUSBAND\nWhat YOl Do Yourself\nYour Investment in Electric Washer.\nInterest on Investment.\nCost of Soap.\nCost of Fuel.\nCost of Electricity.\nYour Time.\nYour Health, and all the\nDiscomforts which WASH DAY\nmeans to the home.\nJust Take Time to\nThink of This\nWhat We\nDo for You\nHERE ARE SOME THINGS\nYou May Not Know About\nOUR MODERN LAUNDRY  SERVICE\nThen compare\nthe other\nside of\nthis ad.\nWE WASH and STARCH all WEARING APPAREL\nReady to IRON, for 60c a Dozen Pieces.\n\u2014This is Known as OUR ROUGH-DRY Service\u2014\nOUR FLAT WASH\u2014All Ironed, at 50c a Dozen Pieces, consists of TOWELS,\nNAPKINS, TABLE COVERS, SHEETS, SUPS and SPREADS in   Mixed Lots.\nSHIRTS and COLLARS Our Specialty-^FINISHED Just Like New\nThe Kootenay Steam Laundry\n\u2014T)\u00bb Only Uundry in Town Vsmf PURE CHIP SOAP\u2014-\nThe Fully Modern and Best-Equipped\nLaundry in NELSON.\n\t\n \u25a0\"\nPAGES NINE\nTO\nFOURTEEN\nSECOND  SECTION\n<F\nNELSON, B. C, SATURDAY MORNING, MAY 10, 1924\nPAGES NINE\nTO\nFOURTEEN\nINTELLIGENTZIA FLIT; THAW 'EDITED' HERE\nINTELLECTUALS\nARE DISGUSTED,\nASSERTS WELLS\nNone of Reasons for Which\nThey Supported Labor\nBeing Justified\nNO NATIONALIZATION;\nCAPITAL LEVY GONE\nMinisters Are Too Busy\nDressing for Court to\nStudy Duties\nBy   H.   G.   WELLS.\nLONDON,    May   9.\u2014(Rv   Cable.)\u2014\n.t   laat   a   general    electSn   o(    the\nIrltlsh    Ijib.jr    party    is    supported\nIth    the    moat    whole-hearted    en-\nhusiasm   ley   a   great   cloud   of   ar-\n;lstlc    and     intellectual    workers.    It\nlad   the   Intelllgenzia   solidly   for   lt.\n.t   had   all   the   higher,   better   tlieat-\nioal    and    artistic    workers    on    its\ntide,   such   great   literary   names   ns\nBernard     Stiaw;     Bertrand     Russell\nThey   supported   It   for   a   variety   of\n,-ery    understandable    reasons,    i'hey\n\u2022rare   revolted   by   the   mean,   Merit   dullness    of   two    historical    but\nIsintpgrating   parties.       They    were\nored    to    death    by    Mr.    Asquith\n\u2014mm    Oeorge.    Mr.    Baldwin,    Lord\nJlrkenhead.   their  endless differences\n:helr    essential    resemblance.    They\n\u25a0ere   attracted   hy   the   brave   hopefulness     and    constructive     program\nIf  the   now   partv.     They   were   c-.'n\n.llowed to  dot   the I's  and  cross  tbe\nr 8 of its ample  promises.    No doubt I\n_hey     helped     the    election,     thoueli '\nHeaven  knows  to  what  evtent   They\nlertainly    brought     In     youth,    even\nn  love with  Ideas,   to   ,\nall   for   the   party;,   they\nnlever    Journalists,    ab|.\nstatists.\nBut   all   that   wan   six   mor.'.hs   ap\nNow that  Labor  has  been  tarnished      by      office,      I      doubt\nwhether    it     will     exercise     the\n\u00abame  compelling  magic  upon   intellectually    adventurous     people\nThere  is uii the difference in  the\nwprld     between     encouraging     a\nLabor     party.     which     promises\neverything,   and   a   glorious   hollaring   up   of   a   Labor   government   which   docs  nothing  amus-\nng.    I  doubt  If  the  Intelligent\nIs   likely   to    be    very   energetic\nwhen   tho   next   election   comes\nIt   Is   not   in    the   nature\npitelligenzia    to    support   a   political\n'arty   in   office.     It.,   function   in   a\nlommunity   Is   to   criticize   actuality\nenlarge   a   people's   aes-\nenvass and\nbrought in\ncontlover-\n0   startle,\n|CUNARD\nANCHOR\nANPHOR-DONALDSON\nv PROM   QUEBEC\nTO QT7BBN3TOWN AND LIVERPOOL\nCarontR   ..May IS. June 11. Julv 5 Auk 7\nCarmanla M-v i'i   *ti* 21, Sept. 18\nPROM   -WOWTWTIAT,\nTO   PLYMOUTW-nn-ERBOURO-\nHttM\nAntonia, Mny 17. Jun 21. Jul. 2r>. Aue. 30\nAunnnla.. M.iy 24. June 2S. Auir 2, Sept fi\nAndanla.   Jun  7. Jul  12. Ann. 1G  Sept 20\nTO OLASOOW\nCassandra     M'<vir> Jun. 11, Jul 11. Au*. 8\nRsiurnia. May 22.. Tun  20. Jul - iff A up. II,\nAthenia . June fi. Jn'v 4, Arnr   1   Auk   21\nTROM  \u00bb1W  TORK\nTO  flunWRTOWK  AWD   LIVERPOOL\n8ryth!a    .. May 24.     Franronia . May 31.\nLaconla      June 7. Srvfhia      .lime  19\nTO   CTmRBOTmO   AND\nSOUTHAMPTON\nBerenjjarla         May 14. Juno 4. June IB.\nAqultania .._ Mny JR. Juno IS, July !)\nMnuret.-tnla      . .     Juno 11, Julv 2, July 30\nTO   LOWDOWrniW.RY   AND   OLASOOW\nCalifornia.   May 24.    Tuscan la     May II.\nCamoronta    June 7 Cnltimhli-.    Juno 21\nTO    PLYMOUTK-CHERBOURO-\nLONDON\nLanoRstria, May 24 Allnnia  May ll,\nMoney ardors and drafts at lowest\nrates. Full Information from Agents\nor Company's Offices. 622 Hastings\nSt.  W.,   Vancouver,   B.C.\nthotic. scientific, political, and social\nperceptions. It in always against\nthe timiK that is; it is always in\nadvance of the thing that can practically   be.\nWhat it is saying of the Labor\ngovernment now is tha* it is just\nas dull, Juat as shifty, just as\nfutile as a l<eft Liberal government   would  have  been.\nCi I'. Trevelyan seems to have\nsome meritorious intentions about\neducation: there has been recognition of Russia\u2014which the Liberals\nwould have given us Just as well.\nApart from that, what have the\nIntelligenzia got for all their support   of   Labor?\nThe   Great   Delinquencies\nI In      Ramsay     MacDonald     we\nhave one of the ablest living\npublic speakers, a prime minister of unparalleled piety and\ngentility; but that is insufficient\nto console the intelligenzia for\ntheir general disappointment.\nThe more brightly the personality of Ramsay MacDonald shines,\nthe less the visible are the creative ideas for which their ad-\nadvanced   spirits   followed   him.\ninstead of some genuine effort towards disarmament there\nhas been the most foolish treatment possible of the business of\nfive   cruisers.\nThere has not even been a\ngesture towards the nationalization of transport mines, production of staple commodities. At\nleast the Labor ministers might\nhave availed themselves of official files, of opportunities to prepare reports, digt%t facts, set\ninquiries afoot, that would open\nthe way to future nationalization.\nThe capital levy has gone behind     the    srrppn,.\nThese Labor leaders, over\nwhom the intelligenzia waved\nits banners of constructive socialism, of a world remade, so\nbravely, turn out to be for the\nmost part Just ordinary politicians abjectly afraid to stop\nanything or start anything that\nmny   affect   votes.\nDress Up In Liveries\nThere is the utmost symbolical\nvalue in the behavior of the new\nLabor ministers towards court affairs. Oreat britain is a monarch v, and ministers must go to\ncourt, but there Is no law, no\nnecessity, to require a Labor representative in a Labor ministry to\ndress up in expensive and unsuitable\nlivery. A neat blue serge suit in\nwhich such a man would attend a\nLabor congress or pay Fifs respects\nto his God In church nnd chapels,\nsurely is Rood enough for a court\nvisit. A red tie perhaps in suitable cases could have emphasized the\nnote   of   Socialism.\nBut no! Theae men the Tntelll-\ngenzla worked for, and elected as\nrepresentatives of a new age. must\nneeds set out at once to beg, borrow\nor steal the uniform of tho old\nthe; j order. As the newspaper photographs witness, most of them wear\nit with little grace or dignity. They\nMm the self-conscious solemnity\nof a new local mayor in his robes.\nAs a rule it matters little what a\nman wears, but these liveries betrayed a stupendous acquiescence.\nIt was unfortunate for good relations\" of the Intelligenzia with the\nLftfcOF party, that two police spies\nwere found under the platform of a\n\u25a0private meeting of the Communist\nparty the other day, Tbe Intelligenzia will always have a very tolerant corner in its heart for the\nCommunist party in Britain and\nAmer'ca. The partv gets hold of a\nlot of the best of the voung people,\nand does them a lot of good. Tt is\nextremist: you cannot have heallbv\nmental life In a community in which\nextremist opinions and Intentions\nare not fairly stated. Prohibition\nof opinions is an insult to adult\ncitizens. Tn Great Britain at least\nthe Communist party is a perfectly\nleral organisation. It has much\nr'trht to hold private meetings as\nthe Liberals or the Tory party. It\nis tbe business of the police and\ngovernment to respect and protect\nits  privacy.\nMr. Ilendorson ought to know a\nlot about Communists. They supply a\nhealthy criticism nnd irritant on the\nleft wine of his partv. He ought\nto have known this police annoyance\nwas going on. he ought to have\nstopped it U soon as he came into\noffice. Kit her he knew this meeting was going to be spied upon, or he\ndid not. Tf he did. he does not understand  freedom;   if he  did  not,  his\nabor   gov-\nofflcials   are   lacking   in   respect   for\nhim.\nIn quite a number of quite sympto- |\nmatic affairs the Labor government,\neither through igforance, or through\nother preoccupations, has failed to\ntake advantage of its opportunities.\nEach one of these failures estranges some new group, of intelligent   people.\nRebuff    for    China\nFor example, everyone with vision\na little wider than the politician's\nrealiies the importance of China to\nthe future of mankind. In the long\nrun, even the question of mishandling five cruisers may prove leas\nserious, than negligence on the part\nof our government toward the\nChina Boxer indemnity money. The\nChinese ask for a difectlve voice ln\nthat matter.\nDr. Tsai is chancellor of the Fekin\nuniversity; he represents the best\neducational influences in China. He\ncomes to I^ondon. but he finds most\nof the ministers he wants to see too\nbusy trying on their breeches and\nstorking to see htm. He is given\na nice talk with a permanent official, nnd told in the best official\nstyle that all his suggestions will\nbe most carefully considered by a\n\"committee.\"\nThe committee which is to be\nset up may be Just the sort of committee that destroys tho confidence\nnf progressive Chinamen In British\ngood faith. As it was first planned,\nit represented material interests\nstrongly, it had only one memher\nwho could be called an educationist,\nthere ls no representative of the new\nChina upon it at all. There has\nbeen much coming and going since |\nthen, and the situation inay be to a\nlarge extent saved, hut if so, it will\nbe in spite of. rather than thanks\nto, any creative comprehension on\ntbe part of t he forejgtt secret:** ry\nor nnv member of the T*a\nernment.\nOne could multiply instances of\nthis sort uf wasted opportunity, in\nwhich the Labor government has\ndisplayed itself as obtuse and blind\nas  any government could  have   been.\nMr.   Smillie   the   other day,   rejecting    \"all    understandings    with    the\nLiberals,\"   declares   the   '[jibor   party\nis   \"out   to   deal   with   root   causes.\"\nNo   Stand   on   Birth   Control\nBut    this    Labor   government   has\nnever   dared   be   caught   looking   at\na   \"root   cause\"   yet.     Take   the   ques\ntion    of   birth   control.\nover populated,   it   has   a   million   un\nemployed, it cannot house its population   decently,   it   cannot   educate   its\nnumeri ins    progeny    above    a    miser\nably       low -KtaiHiftnl. Xlut\nCatholic vote. The housing problem,\nthe unemployment problem, tbe organization of education the relations of the British Kmpire with\nother countries, the question of the\nnecessity of war. all become absolutely different, according to whether\nthe population of a country is considered as being stationary, or ex-\ni pansive. But this present Labor\n1 uovernment Ylocq not know whether\n1 it is for birth control, o: against It.\nlt do-ff- not know anything of that\nsort about itself. It does not know\nwhether it is shaping the future\nfor a restrained, or overflowing population.\nThe Intelligenzia, in the enthusiasm\nof its plunge Into politics, thought\nthat the Labor party\u2014as distinguished from all other parties\u2014did.\nGenerally they are coming to realize how greatly they overrated the\ncreative power and creative will of\nLabor.\nAs exhilaration consequent upon\nbeing allowed carte blanche to writ\"\npromises for the T\/ibor party evaporates, the Intelligenzia will revert\nto ?tormal proper aloofness from tho\npoliticians. \u2022\nTho Intelligenzia are the rain,\nwind and sunshine of the political\nfield, but not the field workers of j\nnolitlcB. To have the Intelligenzia\n*n a partv. is like an elemental being married to a mortal. The elemental\" have magic gifts, but they\na\u00bb-e n*| always comfortable ta live\nwith.\nLabor poll t [cans will feel more\nand more masters in their <wn house\n\u2014at least until the next, election \u2014\nas  the\nevaporate   from   the   part\n(Copyright.     1924.    by\nNewspaper   Syndicate.)\nTHAW TRAGEDY\nTOUCHED CITY\nIN EARLY DAYS\nWilliam Randolph Hearst\nDictated Policy of Papers\nFrom Slocan Pool\nWhen\nHarry\nThaw\nfirst\nleaped\ninto   prominence\n|\u00ab    j\nears\nago    by\nshooting\nStanfi-n\nWhite  rn\ni   roof\ngarden\nD    New\nYork,\nthe   p\nilicy   of\n-several\nHem   Vo\nrk    pa\npen\nn   their\nW.   R.   HEARST\naccounts of the tnyfedy was dictated\nfrom the Slocan pool chalet, 12 miles\nfrom N'elson. within an hour of the\noccurrence, according to J. S. Carter,\nCanadian Pacific railway district passenger   agent   at   Xelsun.\n\"U llliam Randolph Hearst, owner\nof the Hearst publications, was staying at the Canadian Pacific railway\nchalet with bis family at the time,\nEngland toffi***\" wh,'n Thaw shot \"White, his New\nYork papers got in touch with him\nby means of a telejraph service connected up from that city to Slocan\npool, so that within tho hour Hearst\nRoman' \u2122\" rtlrtatin* the Wy they w*re\nto  fellow  in  their accounts.\nThis wns not the only occasion on\nwhich William Randolph Hearst spent\nn  holiday  in  the Kootenays.    A year\nHARRY   K.   THAW\nor   two   later   lie   again   brought   his\nfamily out, and they camped 12 or 13\nmiles up the lake, on the Nelson side,\n, just    In    front    of    the    ranch    then\nritjcal.   exacting   Intelligenz.a   owned   by   K.   H.   Kwert.\n~\"tr. j     Other     well-kmwn     people     have\nthe^   McClure, fip,Mit    some   time    here    or     passed\ni through   the   district   in   fairly  recent\nyears,   says  Mr.  Carter.\nCarnegie a Visitor\nAndrew Carnegie, about 1905, stayed\nat Halcyon Springs, and came out by\nway of Arrowhead, Trout Lake, Kaslo\nand Nelson. After a night here he\nwent on to Spokane.\nRoosevelt was in Alnsworth for a\ntime in the early days, but as far as\nMr, Carter knew, he had not come to\nNelson itself.\nTf  love   laughed   at   blacksmiths,   it\nwould   be   a   long   time   between   its\nlaughs.\nNo bird ever visits the bank of\nTiike Ave**nus. near Naples, because   of   the   putrid   water.\nThe Secret\u00ab\nSuccessful Bakings\nThe best cook would not be successful\nwith poor flour. The best oven will not\nimprove it. The secret of successful baking\nis in the flour.\nUtmost care in the selection and grading\nof grain, and expert milling, are the reasons\nQuaker Flour makes such light, white bread\nand pastry. Its popularity has necessitated\nenlarging our mills, now thc finest in the world. Remember Quaker carries a money-back guarantee.\nSand this coupon for i\nW232 Quaker bread ncipea I\nn for tho \/\ncipea free. \/\nQuaker\nAlwatjs the Same-Alwatjs the Best\nTHE QUAKER MILLS\nSASKATOON and  PETERBOROUGH\nRECIPE COUPON\nNAME _...\nADDRESS \t\nTBI \u00bbU\u00abm\u00bb OMi CO. iAJKATOOH\nHUME SCHOOL\nOld Frame School Building:\nIs Being Dismantled by\nWorkmen\nWorkmen are now busily engaged\nin tearing down the old Hume school\nIn Fairview, the rear portion of\nwhich   will   be  fully   dismantled.\nAt present one room ls about dismantled, the roofing and upper portions having been removed. The\nsecond room in the rear has had\nthe windows removed, and workmen\nare starting on the tearing out of\nthe   rafters   and   shingles.\nThe two front rooms of the build-\n1 : will not be torn away, but will,\n;. time permits, bo moved to one\nH4fl  and   back,  and  will  be  used  aa\ngymnasium and assembly hall for\n< e students. It was In this building*; that the opening was accom-\n; dshed some two weeks ago by\n'Ion,   A,   M   Manson,   attorney-gen-\nFIRE HYDRANTS\nIN SPRING COATS\nStand Out Plainly in Coat\nof Red Paint and a\nCap of White\nEvery fire hydrant in Nelson can\nnow be plainly seen and ls neat\nin appearance. Under the supervision of Fire Chief M, H. Maloney\nall hydrants have been repainted,\nand, unlike previous cleanings, the\nhydrants have a new white top.\nThe new paint adds much to the\nappearance of the hydrants, and\nthese, together with the fire alarm\nboxes recently painted, gives the fire\napparatus a tidy appearance A new\ncoat of paint throughout the fire\nhall has also added greatly to the\nappearance   of   the   interior.\nHMtM   of ,\nINVENTOR PRODUCES\nCLEAR FUSED QUARTZ\nProduct   Will   Transmit    Ultra-Vioiet\nRay for Treatment  of  Diseases;\nUnaffected   by    Hc\u00abt\nLYNX, Mass.. May \u00bb.\u2014A hitherto\nunrevealed process for making clear\nfused quartz, which the inventor said\nwould offer \"marvelous possibilities\"\nfor medical and scientific research\nwas anncunced recently by the inventor, Edward H. Berry, director\nof the Thomson research laboratory\nof the General Electric company. The\ninvention, he said, was the fruit of\nnine years of labor and a great expenditure of money.\nThe most valuable features of the\nproduct, he explained, were its ab'lltv\nto transmit ultra-violet rays fcr the\ntreatment of disease and scientific\nresearch, and its resistance to heat,\nfar above that of platinum, copper,\nor any other known substance.\n, \"For about 100 years.\" he said, \"attempts have been made to make clear\nfused quartz, but little has been done,\ndue to the difficulties of the process.\nIt will now be possible to make perfectly transparent quartz, cf any de\nsired   length,   and   to   a\n11  inches.\"\nIts Invulnerability to li\nrendered the product highly valuable\nfor use hi telescopic mirrors, optical\nlenses, and microscopes, and other\nscientific work where a slight amount\nof heat might result in Inaccuracy nf\nreflection.\nThe inventor showed a gn up <>f\nnewspaper men bow clear ruck crystal imported from Brazil or Madagascar was fused in a specially prepared electric vacuum furnace, and\ntransformed into tbe finished prodtl i\nin 18 minutes.\nTo demonstrate its resistance ' *\nheat, an assistant heated a section of\nquartz tubing to 3200 degrees Fahrenheit, and plunged it Into cold wate-.\nIt underwent no change.\nweather   the   park  ahould   be   crowded   especially   over Tim   week-ends.\nt|[.  . ,. |  |     A   caretaker   is   on   the   job   dally\n\"I and haB the grounds  in a first  class\ncondition.      \u00bbf\"ne.     flower    beds    and\ngarden   is   now   looking   beautiful   and\nsome   e'l client    blooms   are   expected.\nWith   the   removal   of   the  bathing-\nhouses    to   the    lower    edge   of    the\npark,   more  spare  on   the   waterfront\ndirectly   opposite   the   park   entrance\nhas   b.-cn   obtained.     The   rising   of\nthe   water   has   not   yet   effected   the\npark   grounds.\nLAKESIDE PARK\nIS ATTRACTIVE\nGrounds Now In Excellent\nCondition; Flower Beds\nBeautiful\nCLEANUP DAY\nOBSERVED HERE\nCitizens Get Rid of Rubbish\nand Many Small Fireg\nConsume Refuse\nClean\nLakeside p#'k in Fairview is now\nlook.ng splendidly and trom imw on\nwith     the     cnii-Mnn.'-mc     of     splendid\nday on Wednesday was\ntaken advantage of by many Nelson\nresldi nts, and all day long a cloud of\nsinnkt- \\\\,iN se.-ii nsiiig from various\nportions of the city. Much refuse\nvas gathered up and burned, and va-\n* -\"it lots have assumed a much tidier\nappearance.\nDuring the afternoon the city scav-\n\u25a0 \u25a0 ,i'\"i'    ill-part ment    was   kept   on   the\n\" numi.illy.   -removing   what   ma-\n* i- I - mild imt be burned. Several\n\u25a0onts  of paint  were  applied  to  build-\n\u25a0** during Arbor day.\nWhen You Try\n\"SALADA\"\n'J\u2014T aafcl  <f\\l. H47B\nyou will realize the difference\nbetween \"Salada\" and \"just tea.\"\nPlay More!\nEat better food.\nPlay more! and you'll get more out of\nlife! Keener mind, physiciul zest, hearty\nappetite.\nBetter food! Meals cooked wi th all the rich\njuices saved! And cooked while you play. ^\nTrust McClarp's Electric for better food and more\nhours of freedom! This runye does not needwatching !\nfFCIaryfe\nElectric Rang\nThe only range with McClary'.i rfouMjj-\nInsulated, porcelain \u2022 entimrltul senmlesa\nround'Cornerwdheat-retaining oven.\nThe only range with\ntteCrarf't Tor - Red\nProtected Elements.\n114\nYOUR MAZDA  AGENT\nk\\\nHowe Electric Co. *\nPHPJJIJ 530\nOPERA HOU SE BLOCK,\nP.O. BOX 92$\n __\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\n\t\n----- --------\n' Page Ten\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING, MAY io,1924\nDrugs Have Never\nCured Constipation\ninternal   Bathing  the  Only\nPermanent Remedy\nIt   ls   a   surprslng   fact   to   note   the\nSumber of persons who persist ln\niking drugs of various kinds for\nconstipation and go on, year after\nyear, gradually becoming worse all\ntli-   time.\nThe system Is continually becoming\npoisoned, not only with the poisonous\nwaste which accumulates In tli*-) intestines, but the drugs themselves become absorbed, until tbe system Incomes weakened, resistance lo disease is lessoned, the blood becomes\nthin and poisoned, you therefore become liable to any disease that is\nprevalent.\nYou take cold easily, digestion becomes troublesome, heart becomes\n\u25a0weakened, rheumatism or neuritis sets\nIn. then sleepless nights, and kidneys\nbecome affected. In other words, you\nShorten your 1U> and lose tbe pleas-\nTire   of    real    health   and    the    Joy    of\nInternal bathing with the J. B. I>.\nCascade has restored thousands to\nperfect health.\nIt completely removes constipation.\nkeeps the system clean so that tht\nblood circulates through a healthy\nColon Soon the blood becomes \"purified again and you feel just like a\ndifferent person. That elastic step\n\u25a0SOB returns, and you feel that you\nhave    something    yet    to    live    for.\nNow this is not fiction,'It ls the\nexperience of thousands who have\npulled themselves out of the drug and\nmedicine rut and used their own eonv\n\"\u25a0\u25a0nonsense. The J, R L. Cascade lithe perfect eil Invent ion\nA    Tyrrell   of   New   Yorl\nCENTRAL PUPILS\nSTAND WELL IN\nSPRING TESTS\nRolls of Honor for March\nand April Are Lengthy\nOnes\nCoolidge Says League\nIs Dead for States\nClass tests for .Ma\nnt thee Ontr.-il M'tie.iel\npart    well'    hit-lily    sa\ntill'     lleelllir     lists     Uf     fi\n\u25a0ch and April\nfor the most\nisraeteiry. and\npils   averaging\nfor   Tiuernal\nBathing.     His   theory   ls:     Keen   the\nblood   pure   an.t   ynu   will   he   well\nJeweler  of   Cobalt   wrote   us   the   e\nday     savins:       \"Before     ttettinK\nJ    B    L.   Cancade   our   doctor'-\nWere over 1200.00 each mf, and since\nTecetvlng the Cascade two years ago\nwe have not had a doctor in the\nhotiae.      We   all   use   it.\"\nIf you want te) he healthy all the\ntime E.et a J Tt. L Cascade anel Until\nVm.r\u201eBally Send for B,e\u201e,,l,, \"The\nWhat the Why, the Way of Internal\nBathing.\" It is free, and you wll\nlearn manv facta uhe'ut yourself anel\nthe way to be well all the tune.\n\u2022Write for Booklet to-day. A'l'lr.;ss,\nTerrell's Hygienic Institute. 10.. < eel-\nlege  St.. Toronto.\nThis booklet mav he obtained nisei at\ntbe Canada  l'rug &   B....k fee,   l.td.\t\nOur Personal\nGuarantee\nto All Skin Sufferers\nYou have oar absolute guarantee of\nrelief from tht first bottle of D. D. D.\nYour money will be returned without nwnrd\nIf you tell \u00bbi that the lint U.ttle IUmI Itop\nthat itch, did not wot lie and cool that eruption.   Vou alone are the judge.\nWe haTe watched tlie anion of this standard\nmedical dmovery on the _t_\\ akin IS Imndredj\nof ca*e. on.J M h\u00ab    And gw* SMJm|\nw\u00abywlthitfhiniwp*in.youwillfeela\u00bbHiUi-\u00abl   .\nand cooled the moment you apply tin* lootli-   *. \\ A.\\\n00 per cent rue of gratifying length.\nThe following nre the lists nf these\nwho made M pet I'etil in ;tll divisions\nexcept those made up of classes of\ntirade 1 und Cnnie S, wi;h the -attendance percentages for April of\nthe   divisions   concerned:\nDivision IV, Grade 7: Percentage\nof attendance, lis.t;:- -Roy Clarke,\nClifford Crauford, .Innior Paterson,\nEvelyn Clark. Annie Wnllneh, Tcm\n.Mown i, Marguerite Brown, Mary\nKeeley, Vivian Kennedy and John McLeod, .limmie hit, | torothea Coles,\nSandy Martin, Walter Kitto, Ethel\nCameron. Frank I-ofvendalc, Velma\nMclniyi-er Dorothy .loirs* Arthur Carlson. George Radvieh, Nellie Kerush.\nDivision V: Percentage of attendance. 90:27\u201411111 Unlit k. Kalph Tyner.\n.luck Bvres. Harvey Orummett, Annie\nHuwos, Paul llnddleston, Hrnald\nUamsden.        Lome        Klsdon, Kddie\nCraves,     Rot)tld     Waters,     Bob     Joy,\nEvelvn   TkOtnos,   Edna   Buchanan.\n\"A I     Division     W:     Percentage     of     at-\nither I tendance,   92.il!*)\u2014 James   Bates.   Albert\nthe    i,,.. i,   and    Vera    llullid ly,   Tony    Ar-\nbills | (.liri,    Hilly   Hamson,   La let a   Horstead,\nARCHDEACON AT\nROMAN VILLA ON\nISLE OF WIGHT\nBuilt Before Christ, Tile\nPattern Reveals Men\nWith Trousers\n; WHERE GERMAN MINES\nIMPINGED  ON   COAST\nIslanders  Are  Restrained'\nFootball Goal  Draws a\nSigh of Relief, Groan\nIlradin\nPRESIDENT   COOLIDGE\nTold   an   assembly    of   tdltoi\nNew    York   that    the   LasffUl   of\ntiuns  was  dead,   so   far   ns   the   I\n.states was concerned.\n; Jessie McLeod, Irene Krickson, wea-\n, ley Simms, Evelyn Wallace, Olive\n| Maddoe*k. Ilerhert Clark, Marion\nBotlOH, Marv Witilaw. Phyllis Shef-\n! field. Myrtle BoUooo, Edna Shaw,\n1 Itcnald Gosline. Walter Gillett, Anna\nI Uaukuc, TV] ma Kperry. Leslie Me-\n' En.-hern,    IJ.*iii\"y    David-son.\nDivision VII: Percentage of attendance, Hil.Sti\u2014 Lob Bell. Robin a\n1 Motiat. Frames Wheeler. Merle\nArchibald, Fi.'d Niwnnn, Jleene Law-\n\u00bbon, Gee Boot, Waltar DahlqttJat,\nGrace Mav. Janos Minnis, Al'X Mac-\nInnis, Edna, Manndrel!. Alan Bennett, Florence Smeaton. Reg Taylor,\nMan-ia ToWfOod, G-artrudfl Win,\nf-Hidlev Blackwood, Dorcthy McDonald Lucy Williams, \"Winnie Foster,\nMargery ' Thomas. Willard McCand-\nlish, Donald Fraser, David Mosses,\nDonald Scott, Gerald Towgood, Gordon   Steu'art.\nDivision VIM. Grade 8: Percentage\nof attendance, ss.M Ernest Green.\nGladys MeLeed, Lily 1'.rad.-diaw, Mary\nRaukuc, Mnrgerv Bsnson, Albert Jeffrey. Fergus P.inh-. Kobert Hawthorne. Jenny Hush, Verne Irwin,\nRon Hodges, Connie Waters, Mildred\nBtffttrom, Robtrl Carlson, Ivy Bird,\nGrace BcCualf, Tent McLean, Allan\nKohh, John Dolphin. Rolf Sostad.\ntinan.      Gordon      Leitch,\nInf, coolinf\nWe have made faat friendi of mr>re thnn one\nfamily in tecomm.-n.liDK 1>. h l>. to n akin\n\u25a0ufferrr here and there ud *\u25a0 want you to\ntf* it now on our p-taili**\"*- n\" pm ifuar.iiite*\nrrice.$l\u00bb bottle.   Wl D- D.D.8osptOft.\nCity   Drug   A   Stationery   Co.,   Canada\nDrus  A   Hook   Co,:   Pool*   Droit   Co\nThe Athlete's\nRemedy\nfor Sprains and Bruises\n\"THE iprains and\n\u25a0* biunes tncountered\nimport vanifK v. ith thc\n\u25a0pplicatunol Miiiard's\nLiniment. Um fact is\namfirnird by the Allowing letter received\nfrom W.E.NMVrmn. SLry. Ann-\nstrong Mi-jli School Baseball Club :\n\"Since ihe tteri of the Baseball stason\nim hau been hindered with tore\nmutticj, sprained angles, tic, out just\nas soon at M started usint Minora i\nLiniment our troubles ended. Every\nathlete should keep a b-ottlt handy''\nThi. kn\u00ab \u25a0 \u00abily one of the many wc\nfaavc received Irom well-known a'-hictei.\n'harles   J.\nin*, i: ion\ntendance.\nTitsworth,\nFiare.  \\-\nnel.la    Kennedy.\nIX:    porcentsfft   ol    it-\n:,M     J...,, j)!:    ^t'-rn,   Aileen\nKsthsrlna Wilson. 'Carrie\n>rta Grodskl, Alan Mi Lean.\n1 iiahl'i'iisi, Dorothy Wallace,\nPlorancc Maundrell. Russell McArthur, June Caml.h', Ian Ritchie.\nIM ward Char--. Lawrence McEwan,\nRrun    Blfter,    Tuflke    Martin.    Connie\nCrltchtey,  Ven  Bhaw.\nDivision X, Grade C: Percentage\nOf attrndame. 90.&0\u2014Alic^1 Mih-s,\n]', c-y Wliii'hous.', Marv Doncast,-r,\nDorothy Stai.away. Genevieve Walley,\n!,,.\u25a0 Cotter, Annie Stromstcdt, Bob\n,\u25a0. ..,-.. Loui-*. Lovd, I\" ne Rowley.\nElsie Smith. Lizzie Olynyk, Mah Kee,\nIna Johnson. Guy M*>rey, Ilaymond\nMcKay Norman Dahlquist, Walter\nPort ' Rov McKensIe, Janet McKenzle Eleanor Wright, Harry Cain,\nl.-m Mas^ev, Sam Miiddleston. Jim\nWallace, Wari'cii Cartmel, Frances\nI'arker,   Elsie   Kllherg.\nDivisinu    XI.    Grade    1:     Percentage\nline      become;\n:-ml   magnetU\nMrs. Chapman\nSays ilii\nPacific\n^\/lenffoinillmflSajKtd\nDOMINION EXPRESS\nMONEY ORDER\nj -\"C.P.R. STATIONS .-'*\nDOMINION   EXPRESS   AGENCIES I\nBUT ADVERTISED GOODS\nt\u2014vertitint Lowtrs Prices\nShe says its natural\nflavor alone makes\nit superior to all\nother brands.\ncf   atti'neiancfe.   Rl.SI\u2014Arthur   Ander*\nson. MeeDieire'l Oinhurn anil .lark K<l-\nnaiiiilsiln.   Teem   MalnliielT.    Ktli-'l   K..1.\niSOIl.      .leealll-tle'     ^'el'.lllll,      ' \u25a0,.':! i,'     W'llleel\n.lei,. Ham, MarKariei Kit-ley. .link Hell\nPhyllis   Satnliseni.   l-'rane is   .M.-ielhi!la]il\n.lulu- li,. iiitakiiiiei. Charlie n-e.\nileea-K'-    Kirby.    Lillian   \\Viiaat.    U-i\nMl-t.ee,eel, KsthlT Si'hlll\/.\", Ileeliae- Sleell,\nMtlli.-l       I',...].-.       l.le.Vll      llllle -II.       I'.V-IVII\nPale,    Jack    Buchanan,    Jack    Learn,\nAllen   WoOdrOW,   l.leiyel    RatclUfa.\nDivision   XC:    Percantftefa   of   at-\ntendanoe, 811.89\u2014Lury Andrews. Max-\nine Chevalier, llwiiielnlvii I'etiny,\nMarlon Me-lniiis. H, , 11. \\ VVillnn. Iles-\nsle Ileeieke'r, Rosemary Kina. m.tdys\nMe-Kinniin, Kva Mellaril'-. I'aiiline-\nWaele-, Phyllis Gray, Perl Creen.\n1-ilith C'.iililstnitli, Helen l.alnrnell.\n.lark    Townsend.     Elaine    BtanaWefty,\n,!ae-k    Te ,i.:-i-       I la' .'1     I' -'-        Si ill -\nlev Jjukson, Stanley McKlnnon, Hob\nM'l-Farlanel. Bnlibv Walli.n, Hilly\nWaters.   Cecil   Jrftcott,   II'-:.v   Walki-r.\nDivisii ii XIII: I'.T.-.-iilaue of nt-\ntendanee. 74.su -drael.- :l se'iiinr. Marguerite Phillips, Leonard Crenlski;\n(Italic r junior, Anni.- Mnraro: Craelc\n\u25a01 senior, llar.elel p.nlc, .l.ehn Plclihcr.\nCharlie Woeells,\nDivision   XIV.   Craelc   II:   Percentage\neef    attendance,    si--.ieey     Deem-asi.-r,\nKlizabetli     Carrie..      Ray       Ball,      Kill-\nBpeira,   Z1U   ilini.   \"live   Dahlqulat,\nDorothy Hall. Mabel Hall, llclle llam-\nsav. Doris Maxu-e-ll Marlba Kltiltle.\n.1 ul. s   Cbevaller.   Marion   Clark'-.   Olga\nP.olettl. Bmerlco Dafeo, Srnle Jones,\n.ii-iin Waavar, Harold Calma, Rose\nKmst. David Allan. Evelyn Brereton,\nClifford Kate-lift,-. .le-in Rowc, CeorRe\nSlee.l Mallei lleil]ellin. 1-Mlia Kinllle-.\nPel.r Hu.al. Hunt-las Rit.-lii-. Pemsy\nS. luil\/.c. Marjorie null, Klcanor 11,n;-\nKart.\nDivision XV: Pin rentage of attendance.     SB- -Susie     WilSiell,     (eliVe.     i'.cll,\nI'reeia    McKay,   Jean    Bmith,    Mark\nI.VIl'h.      Pillie-     Me-l-lniU.     Qf\u2014.     V\u2014V'\ndon   Ernest Weeeells, rlieew .Iowa, John\nWecker,  Bdfar Wheeler, w    Au-\ndct-s.en. (Icot-k-c Beattle, Oetrge Hates,\nilk,,us Ewait.-Peei, McCandllih. Blllle\nMiles. Philip Smith. Peter Korolak,\n\\ 11.. it Push. I-'iilie-is I'lalk. Alfl.-el\nParker. Hurry Knittle, Nick Hucal.\nDivision XVI. Craelc 3 s.-nioV: Percentage of attendance. S2.41\u2014Maurice\nLatornell, Woo Hontr. Qladya Teague.\nElsie Corbie, Esther Janaow, Jean\nCotter.  Venus Atkinson.   Ivlna   Houae,\nLeonard Stewart, Alice Bkellern,\nPeter Uollck, Pcguy Oamble, David\nPre wle. Ab'X Ritchie. .limmie Dee.\nDonald Poclc. Carl Larsen, Teddy\nCol.lsmilb. Alme-:nla Craves. Llla\n111 iekseetl.\nDivision XML Per.-etttage of attendance, 83\u2014J,-an Mai-Kiiinon. Elfie\nMorris. Teddy Andereon, Teddy\nEorbcs,    Alfred    De   Ciiaiamo.    lthoda\nsin (fi. i.i Violet Andrews, Nina p.ln-\ngamai', Teim Crack. Cee Kong. Carl\nOallirnno, Florence Tcwner, Ina Minnie   Monica Beeetsn, Harold Bmythe,\nI'crcy    Chow,     Ted     Utile.     Martha\nUlcn Irene plowman. Jem Piiii'i\nCordon Williams, ('bong Lee. Dorothy\nRow,-. John Mure-y, .limmie Skell.-ni.\nAnelr-w .N'iv.-n. Cc.eige Cooper, Cla.l-\nn,ss Herstead.\nPASSMORE HAS\nTALK ON NUTS\nFarmers'   Institute   Offers\nPrizes to  Children\nKilling Gophers\nhe  todM\nhit\n\u25a0tnolM\ntiBwroui\nj.   hem\nluting\nof   thia\nIsle   ut   Wight\nMarch   IB,   UM\nVhe Editor:\nI have t.'iki'n another slii)) in my\nlier-pRrinntlon. I hnvp U-fl Halifax,\nm.l am now in the scuth of HiiKlaiul,\n-layitiK with some oou.sin.s whom I\niiail   never   beforo   seen.\nThere Is noiliing in oonnoction with\nUMit'ax that woniii, I think, bf in-\ncrestinR hi y #ir readers. I might\nlerhap.s say that there was a nasty\n'\u25a0\u2022x all 'Hi.' time il romained there.\nly noon caeh day it thinned out\n\u25a0omewhat, lint what i-emaiiu-d, together with the volumes o\nh-hh.'.i    f. rth     fmm    the     I\nloth factory rhimneyn, left\nwli i eh prevented one from\nniythinK* lil;\u00ab' a --Ifar view\ntown   of   IM.0MI   inhabitnntn. ,\nI think I oliEht not to pass hy\nthfi   p&rlffa   riuinh   of   Halifax  without\n -\u25a0 mention.    It is a large old atone\nImilding of very fine proportions. All\nllie windi ws, except those in the\nvestry, are filled with fine stained\nmI.-vss, even the little windows up in\nIhe elosestry are of colored glass.\nI undershmd there %T% three clergy,\nthe rector and two curates, and from\nthe number of hanna of marriage read\neut at the Hiniday morning service,\nI should judge there is plenty of\nwork   for all  of  them.\nHalifax Opens a Valley\nHalifax is ImMi nr* the hills forming both sides if a rather steep valley. At first the town was built al\nihe hot torn of the valley, but gradually, as the town grew, tlie buildings spread tip the hills on both sides,\nr4 that to cross from one side of\nHalifax to the other you mus't descend a steep hill on one side, then\ni limb up a sleep hill on tlie ether\nside,   to   get   to   your   destination.\n1 have, in a former letter, spoken\nnf the fine Shire horses of Halifax,\nand    the   steepness   of   many   of    Ihe\nstreets   is   stiffieien't   explanation   why\nsuch    large,    fine    horses    are.    found\nni'i miwji.\nAfter a week spent here, I took\nihe (rain for the Isle of Wight at\n\u25a0vjo a.m., and arrived at Dividing,\nin the island, a little before dark in\nthe evening. This being what is\nhere censidered a long trip, we traveled in a corridor train, which fortunately was heated. Also we had a\ndining car, and were furnished with\na very |OOd dinner at 12 o'clock.\nIt i est ST. cents, and the same dinner\nwould cost on one of our diners al\nleast Jl.fa) or more. The serviei\nwas more confused than on the Cana-\n\"llan   1'acific   railway,   fcr   they   had   ;\nand top boot\nccachman.\nStocks snd Whipping Post\nAnother, most Inrereatlng relio of\nthe Jong ago Is a room, an open cell,\ncontaining the stocks and whipping\npost, where bad men had served out\nto them what was coming to them.\nThe room Itself had two of Its walls\nmade of ircn bars from floor to roof,\nN one could see tbe whole interior.\nThe whipping post stood in the center\nof the room, ut the straps that\nhound hlrn to the post were still in\nplace. The stocks consisted of a 'twe-\ninch plank six or eight feet long,\nand lying along the floor, but abAut\nII inches above it. Over the upper\nedge wet* cut cut five semi-circular\npieces, and over this lower plank\niiml parallel to it was i-,nothet* similar\nplank wilh other five scmi-eireulnr\npieces cut out to match the Icwor\nholes, | \"When the upper plank was\nlet down on top of the lower one,\nthere were formed five circular holes.\nTwo of these holes were* to Imprison the ankles rf the culprit, another two to hold his wrists, and\nthe fifth fitted over his neck, and\nthere he was as snug as a bug in a\nrug and exposed to the rough practical Jokes of the idle roughs who\npelted him with dead cats or rotten\neggs or decayed vegetables, until the\ntime came for bis release, when no\ndcubt he sneaked off a sadder but a\nwiser man, One would think that\none lesson of that kind would suffice\ntOt  \u25a0  lifetime.\nmended a confirma-\n-here Ihe bishop of\niiiifnnieil about II\nThe bishop give tho\nimpressive address.\nand   gone   to   tho   bottom   of\nry pedoed\nthe sea.\n| It was wetrd but Interesting to\nheor from first hand of the unwholesome bread, the total absence ot\nsugar, of the care taken to obscure\nthe lights, and many such precautions\nte* fear of bombs from airships. The\nfears of the people were well grounded, for the isle of Wight Is only a\nfew miles from Portsmouth, and\nPortsmouth is a gival naval slat'oa,\nand it would have been nuts to the\n(iermans to have destroy.-d I few\nwarships or blow up repair shops and\nma-'hinery, and such like, belonging\nto   ihe   Hrilish  navy.\nThe reason why Portsmouth and\nadjacent country was not bombarded\nmust lie place I to the credit oT the\nPrilish care aad watchfulness rather\nthan to any tender compunction on\nthe part of the Germans.\nI   hopey Mr. tCditor,   tills   letter  will\nnot be found Ufl long for your paper.\nThe fact is,  there are  so  many  interesting   things  one   might   write   about\nthat   it   is   difficult   to   tell   when\nwhere  to  stop.     Put   stop   I   must,\nof respect for tho space  you hav\nspare,   .so   I   say   no   more   just   now.\nbut   may   have   .something   to   say   in\nmy   next  abuit   Portsmoulh,   where\ngo next Saturday.\nH.  BSfiR\nThe use of hammocks by bluejackets of the United States navy te\ngradually giving way to more comfortable bunks. A thousand of the\nlatter are being installed on the Oklahoma at the Puget Sound navy yard\n,i'inl it is said ihe hammocks will give\nway to 'the hunks on all American\nships. \\\nNations of the Balkan regions are\nplanning to put a stop to war then,\nperhaps because the novelty wore oft\nsome   time  ago.\nLift Off-No Pain!\nSo light are the strong duralumin metal girders of the navy's\nnew giant airship 7,H-l, that a 10-\nfoot ' length   of   one   of   them   can   be\neasily   lifted   on   a   man's   little   finger.\nula'.\nII\noulhampton\nollllg    people,\nandldates a   very\nBelieved to be one of the lar-r\nest instruments ,of its kind In th\nworld, a drum with a diameter 0\neight and a half feet was recent!\nused in a London picture th\n| to  imitate  the  firing   of   cannon.\nIer\nDoesn't    hurt    one   bit!      Drop    a\nlittle   ''I-'reczone\"   on   an aching  corn,\nlustanMy    that   com    stops \\hurtlng,\ntiurn shortly you lift it right off with ,\nfingers.\nVour druggist sells a tiny bottle\nof \"Freezone\" tot a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard c^rn,\nsoft corn, or corn between the toe%\nand the foot calluses, without soreness    or    Irritation.\n\u25a0i    which    he\nm ubl   rather   h\nhat    last    moil\nmockery   by   p\nmVs\nervlc\nh< inly told th\nVI them wilhd\nrft than to n\ndging themse:\nless they mad\nand   prayer   t\nh<\ncp one for\nr the potatoes and a\nns and cabbage and\nbe to be all getting\nway. \"With us In\nter suffices for each\ni. ok's galley  is  much\nBritish    Columbia\nvastly    superior\nmilk.\nPACIFIC MILK CO.\nLIMITED\nFacteriel    at    Ladner    and\nAbboUford,   B.C.\nxe Pleasure Vd\/\nlo Europe\nThcCunard-Canodian Route It\nhotels\nthe pleasure way to Kurope. The\nshins are ocean-coinij hotels \u2014\nwith luxurious lounges, music\nPASaSMOlli;    in'.    May    X\u2014At    the\nmonthly   meeting  ot  the  Slocan  Valley\nFarmers'    Institute    h-bl    at     iMssiimre\nSaturday.   V    V.   Hunt   of   Nelson,\u2022district horticulturist, addressed the meet-\n, In-.' on   the   culture   of   nuts.     He   made\nproduces   \\ it    (.uiu.    apparent    that    this    district\nj is    quite    dutiable-    f'T    the    grow iti    ol\nnuts on a commercial   scale.\ni      Hugh   Nels-'ii,   district    forest   ranger,\nwas     another     visitor,    and     spoke     on\n'forest    protection,    giving    figures    on\n1 timber   valuation   an '.    market a hie   timber.      He   also    weiu    into    the   necessity     of     f Ire     prevent hm.\nA vote of thanks was given both\nMr.   Hunt   and   Mr.   Nelson.\nA resolution was also passed that\nIhe institute urge the attorney-general to reinstate the local Justice of\nthe peare, B. .lamh-son; also to ftp-\npoint C. S Hroi'kliiginn as a Justice\nof the peace for Slocan Park, as tt\nIs felt that a great bnrriship ts\nbeing placed on this district oil account of there being no Justice of\nThe   peace   in   the   vicinity.\"\nOn gopher control It was resolved\nthat the Institute give three prizes\nto the children killing the largest\nnimber <>( gnplo-rs. prizes lieing |tj\n2 and tl; also thai a bounty of 1\ncent be paid [ier tail for all gophers\nkilled.\nA   dance   conclude,!    the   evening.\nrooms, writing rooms, smoking\nrcK.nis, closed and open promenades -and meals und service\nalways up tu thc Cunard\nstandard.\nThe \"CAKONTA\" and \"CARMANIA.\"\nthe famous -'pretty sister*\" are now\non the -Quel*-.- - tWlfust - Liverpool\nService, to met tb* incrt-iiiintl d*\u00bb-\n(1 for the Cabin CUm of tt earner in the Canadian Service.\nFour dayafrom land lo land- two day* on tbe gluriouaSt. Lawrence, and every\nmocneot Ailed with interest.\n0m the Cunard A^ent in your town, or write for General Information Folder to\nTHE CUNARD STEAM SHIP COMPANY, LIMITED        Vll\nPostmasters i\nwill act as en\nplaces when- ib.\nlater agents. M\nto the post mil?\nla available Howard the appll\nofficial labor i|\ners in Ml I of\nlster   nt   lie   p\nWhen a man\nwith the affair-\nhe    can    gd    [|\nNew   '\/. til:\n1 towns\ngents.     In\n,ovcriimcnl\nmay   appl>\ni inploy\ner.   and    if    no   labor\npostmaster will for-\natlcn to Ho- nearest\nent. Similarly work-\ninplovnient may leg-\nI    office,\nattempts to interfere\nq| ;i woman the best\nthe   worst   of   it.\nKMioiDS\nINDIGESTION\n, _\u00bb -\nwaiter fdr each nf th\nthe   meal,  one   for   tl'\nthird for the beam i\nthey     seemed     I,,     bo\ni'i    each    oth\nCanada, one\ntable,   Uld   th\nlu-arer   the   guests,\nAt 20 minutes past 1 o'clock I was\nit Huston station, and took a taxi\nf..r Waterloo station. Here j had\ni train withnul corridors, but fortunately it was not a long run to\nPortsmouth. Of cc urse, I saw nothing\nof the town; I simply passed through\npart of it to a ferry boat, which took\nme ti> the island. Crossing on the\nferry I had a glimpse of the iron-\ni hols  of  the   Jtrttish   navy.\nI said I reached lira ding Monday\nevening, and this is Thursday morn-\ni**ig, so I have had cnly two whol**\ndays hen- as yet. Yesterday I visited\nn most interesting ruin of an ancient\nRoman villa, not more than a couple\nof miles from where I am at present\nresiding. ,\nRelics   of   the   Romans\nThis ruin, which dates from before the time of Christ, had lain for\nages undiscovered in a field. About\nISM some relics were accidentally un-\neiLrthed, and now the whole ground\nflcor has been uncovered, nnd one\ngets I good idea of what the villa\nmust have look'd like. The floor;\nconsist of little tiles, laid in pat\nlerns, of human forms and anlmnlf\nOne of the human figures is represented with trousers on his legs. This\nIs most Interesting, showing as It\ndoes that the coverings of men's pedal\nextremities fltftt frcm long, long ago.\nf'olns and nails and hinges anil much\nbroken pottery lias been fished Up\nand carefully arranged in glass cases.\nThere is, a few yards from the villa,\nthe hot bath house with tunnels into\nOM villa lo bring in the beat from\nIhe bath house, also a well which\nstill gives good water.\nThe owner of tho land has built\nover the villa a good strong building, tc preserve the ruin from further\nravnges of the weather. He has also\npensioned off his old coachman and\nmade him curator of the place, and\nthis old caretaker is a most Interest-\nii g speeinien of the old servant in\nhis dress, manner and speech. He\nwas unite graminal U al when talking,\nand   with    his    short    side-whlsk\u00abrs,\n< ffort   by   woi\ntheir   promise.\n\"Although   it   was  ft   Thursday  afternoon,   the   church   was   well   filled   by\na    very   attentive   and   interested   eon-\ncregation.      lieliirning   to   Itrading,    I\n1 |  nice three-mile walk across  the\nds   with   awuly   fW   niy   guide.\nFootball   Match   Like Church\n\u25a0a  Saturday my  cuiisiu and   I   went\ntrain   to   Vent nor,   a   h ivn   ;i   little\nther     smith     from      lirading.      but\nwhen   we   got   there   the   fog   was   so\nihh'k   that   we   could   see   for   only   a\nfew   yards   around   us,   and   we   spoke\nof  an   Immediate   return.     Fortunately\nwe   decided    to    try   it    for   a    while,\nami   started   downtown,   and   presently\nthe   fog   lifted  and   the   day   was   fine,\nthough   dull.\nWe had the pleasuro rf seeing a\nfootball match, and il was o.uite a\ncontrast to a game in Canada or the\nStales. The crowd was as quiet as\na congregation in church. A good\nkick was received with silence, a\ngoal gained was greeted with a sigh\nof relief by our side and a silent\ngroan by those who sympathised with\nIhe losers. This was so different tO\nthi yells that would have rent the\nair in  such   a  case  in Cantula.\nWe walked alt ng the road and\npassed the house of Admiral Jellicue.\nHe is now, I am told, a governor In\nAustralia. Next there was pointed\nout tO mc I point where during the\nwar a mine drifted ashore and exploded, smashing all tho gl.iss In\nthe neighborhood  hut   doing little ftir-\nthtr  harm.     I   was   told   thai   large\nquantities i f all sorts of things were\npicked up by fishermen and others,\nremains   of   ship*   that   had   been   tor-\nWoroivcia\nM\u00bbnul\u00bbclured by Gpwral (egar Ctmpany limUcd. ^^\nIMPERIAL T06ACC0 COMPANf OF CAKADA UMlTlf\nSol* Di.tribvitor.\nDo vou eve* stop lo\nT>etv\u00a7e theWills published\nin iheDaity Paper*?\nBe\/ore it if too late\u2014\n?omidetLiwlnwrance\nThe\nRE\nturers Life\nINSURANCE   COMPANY\nHi** Offics, Te-mtTO.CAHiWA.   -\nC. E. WILSON,\nSupervisor of the Kootenays, Nelaon,\nn. c.\nWithout   obligation   please   tend   m\u00ab   copy   of    your    booklet    \"Elimin\u00bbt\u00bb\nwould   like   to   carry   sufficrdnt   inmranr.e   to    provide\na   monthly   incoma   of   $\nrs  of  ago,   Married   or   Singlt.\ni ,       \u25a0   .,    \u25a0 i Add ret \u25a0\nUnctrtainty.\"\nI\nm_\n _\t\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING,#MAY 10, 1924\nPage -Uvea\nJAPANESE HOME\nISASTUDYIN\nIHE AESTHETIC\nScroll'and Flower Shrine\nDignify the Principal Room \/\nFLOWER CULT IS\nNATION'S PASSION\nTiny Charcoal Fires Warm\nthe Rooms, Tended by\nHands of Mistress\n(By    CAPT.    REGINALD    LINDSAY\nof    Boswell,    B.C.)\nArticle  No. 4\nAll the floors In Japanese houses\nare covered, with rice matting or\ntatami. The Japanese spends the\nJapanese.\nThe mats are always of a uniform\nsue, 6 feet by 8, and the area of a\nroom Is always estimated by the\nnumber of mats lt will take to cover\nthe floor. A room is always speken\nof as a 10-mat room or a IP-mat\nroom, and a Japanese will immediately know the dimensions of a\nfoom by such a description.\nTstami are two Inches thick, made\nof rice straw tightly pressed to-\ntgSjtber.-.&nd aewn with rectangular\nM*Eifr emA corners, and covered with\nt-iimr, *#tven white matting made\ntmrti rWlm*9- Th* floors of a Japa-\n* *9J-W always present a scrupu-\n\" ' -'C^P** ar>d clean appearance,\nm ' thos they are a faithful mirror\nof th\u00ab people who live on them.\nAverage   Room   Is   Ten   Msts\nRooms are of various sizes, but\nin a middle-class Japanese house a\n10-mat room ls the average size.\nbut rooms much larger are not rare.\nShould a room be found too small\nfor the use for which ft is required,\nthe sliding doors\u2014fusuma or kara-\nk.imi\u2014dividing it from the next room,\ncan easily b\u00a9 removed, and thus\ntwe rooms are thrown into one. or\na long line of rooms ran easily be\nconverted Into one big apartment\nshould an entertainment or other\nfunction require it. The sliding\n\u25a0panels are -usually beautifully adorned\nwith paintings of birds and landscapes, and generally do not reach\nto the ceiling. They are six feet\nhigh, and above them usually some\nbeautiful panels of open wcod carving, which serve as a ventilator.\nThese are  called ramma.\nThe windows are screens of rlee\npaper mounted on delicate lattice\nwork, often of the most beautiful design, which admit 'a soft, subdued\nlight. These are called the shojl,\nand at night, or In wet weather, are j\nprotected by wooden shutters called j\na ma do.\nA   Shrine\nThe  principal   rocm   In  a  Japanese!\nhouse    is    always    of    I     StsTSOtyptd\nkind, the most striking feature being\nthe tokonoma. This is a recess, with\na raised platform of beautifully\ngrained and polished wood. The respect with which this is treated\nmight lead the uninitiated to think\nIt to be of a religious nature, but\nits significance is entirely aesthetic\nThe extraordinary degree to which\nthe cult cf beauty Ms followed in\nJapan is strikingly illustrated by the\ntokonoma. Above It ls the one picture of the room, the kakenoma. a\nscroll picture, which ls changed ac-\neordlng to the season, or in honor\nof some particular guest. Below, en\nthe tokonoma, Is placed some object\nof art, or a flower arrangement, always following in theme tho subject\nof the plc'ture above. The ikebana,\nor flower arrangement, ls a study\nwhich has been passed down for\ngeneratiens, and it forms one of the\nobjects of study that a Japanese\nlady of culture spends many years\nin learning.\nIt Is believed that the art originated in India, with the worship of\nthe Buddha imago, the arrangement\nof flowers being placed as an offering before the god. In Japan, where\nit has made a characteristic development, the art originated some 13 centuries ago with Ono-no Smoko, who\nhad orders from Crowrj Prince Sho- !\ntoku-Taishl, the Constaine of Japa- j\nnese Buddhism, to arrange thc flow-\nId before the Image ln the prince's\nprivate  chapel.\nCult  of   Flower  Arrangement\nIn the second half of the 14th century, tho art made a great advance,\nside by side with the development\nof the chc-no-yu or tea ceremony,\nunder the fostering care of the Ashi-\nkaga Shoguns. In course of time\nmany different schools sprang up.\nrivaling one another In popular favor.\nAmong these schools may be noted\nthe presence of three different principles, to one cf which each school\nadheres. Some schools advocate naturalism, teaching that arranged flowers should be made to look as natural as possible; some others take a\npride li^. twisting and bending the\nstems and arranging the flowers and\ntwigs In all sorts of fanciful ways;\nwhile yet another class are moderate,\nnet going to the extremes of the\nother two. These two principles we\nknown M shin, gyo and so, terms\nderived from the three styles of\nChinese  ideographs.\nFlowers arc arranged to bo viewed\nfrom the front only; but In the ca*o\nnf flowers to be placed on banqueting tahles. they are so arranged as to\nhe enjoyed from different directions.\nAs a rule, tho arranged flowers in\na vase consist of three blooms or\nbranches, so as to produce the de -\nsired effect of elegance and refinement.\nIf the kakemono, or hanging scroll,\nis Bhcrt and broad, the flower vase\nshould bo placed in the center of\nthe tokonoma or alcove, while If it\nIs long and narrow it should be\nslightly to one side, the idea being\nthat the flowers, while adorning the\nroom, should not hide from view\nany part cf the scroll. It is also\na rule to arrange the flowers high\nIn tho vase, if the. scroll is short\nand broad, and to arrange them\nlow If the srroll hangs down low.\nIf   the   scroll   contains   a    picture    of\nmain\ni   \u25a0\nflow.\ngrow in marshes or by rlvsr banks\nshould be selected, while if the scroll\ngreater part of his life on the tatami ; he is born on them, walks\non them, sits on them, eats en them,\nsleeps on them, and dies on them.\nThey are at once the floor, the table,\nand the bedstead, and thus play a\nvery great part In the life ot the\ndisplays flcwering plants, flowering\ntree branches should be chosen for\nthe vase.\nA scroll on which writing appears should be accompanied by\nflowers which are suitable to the\nthe theme of the poem which ls\ndisplayed. A flight of wild duckB\nshould he accompanied by an arrangement of rushes or other plants\nwhich are associated with the haunts\nof such birds. The mere beauty\nof the flowers themselves is superseded by the true artist in flower\narrangement, and the whole thing\nbecomes a poem In itself, a thing\nof beauty appealing not only to\nthe eye but also to the fn^llect.\nThere are few people who have\nstudied so deeply the cult of beauty\nas the Japanese, and it is this simplicity and concentration that they\nshow their aesthetic culture.   .\nAlongside the tokonoma usually isj\nfound a beam of natoral wood,\nchosen because of its especial beauty\nin the way of knots and grain.\nThis is polished in its natural state\nand stands as a witness of natural\nbeauty in contradistinction to the\nartificial aesthetic-Ism of the tokonoma  and   its   flower  arrangement.\nIt is difficult to describe the full\nbeauty of a Japanese room, the\nsimplicity of the room itself, the\nwhite tatami and the soft light admitted by tho shojl, all tend to\nconcentrate the mind on the few\nobjects of art that are displayed-\nM very much in contrast to the\ncrowded nature of tlie ordinary\nwestern dwelling, where so many objects clash, all tending to a confusion of mind which makes the\nobservation of one particular thing\nalmost  Impossible.\nIt is this concentration on th\none essential* idea of beauty, I\nthink, which helps to make the\nJapanese such wonderful craftsmen.\nOno Is continually surprised by\nthe artistry displayed in the production of even the most humble\nhousehold utensil, and-it makes one\nalmost blush with shame to think\nof the monstrosities of taste that\nare hi general amongst us west\nc rm rs, who pride ourselves, often\nvery foolishly, upon our superior\ncivilization. There are very few\nwestern rooms which contain any\nobject of art whicii would be worthy\n(if consideration as an example of\nabstract beauty, and very few of\nus have cultivated the faculty of\ndiscriminating or concentration in\nregard   to   things   aesthetic.\nTin- hibachi is the next important thing in tlie room. This and\na few cushions are the only furnishings. The hibachi is a bowl\nwhich contains the charcoal fire\nwhich   heats   the   apartment.\nHibarhl aro of many kinds. Some\ntimes    it    is    a    curious    stump    or\nj gnarled   excrescence   of   a   tree;    or\nit   may  be  of  \u00abtone   or  earthonware.\nor   porcelain.     Its   shapes   varies   as\n\u25a0 much   as   lis   composition.     It   may\nI he   round   or   square,   or   oblong.\nSonietim.-H     ihe     hibachi     fs    built\nInto a small chest, a foot high,\nin one end of which there Is &\nset of drawers, the top of which\nserves aa a table. This kind, however, ls only seen in the general\ndomestic living room of a house\nor inn, and never in the guest\nchambers of a private room.\n\u2022 The hibachi is filled within a\n\u25a0tfew Inches of the brim with ash,\nwhich should be carefully heaped\nup Into a cone, the top of which\nls hollowed a little. Into this depression a few embers of glowing\ncharcoal   aro   placed.\nThere is much etlquet in connection with the hibachi, and interference is ns little tolerated as would\nbe the case with our fires. The\nguest who insists on poking the\nfire is Just as unpopular as would\nbe the person who played about\nwith   the  charcoal  of the  hibachi.\nThere is no picture more attractive\nor more characteristic of Japan than\na room with gleaning black bordered\ntatami and a fine old hibachi, at\nwhich a Japanese lady is sitting.\nPerhaps the fire has become disarranged or burned low; so with\nfinished grace she takes the hi-\nbashl (the tongs, after the fashion\nof chopsticks) between her taper\nfingers, deftly clips the pieces of\ncharcoal and arranges them into\ntiny pyramid. Around this she\ndraws the ashes with the scraper\nuntil she has made a miniatun\nFugi San. 8he does not do this\nfrom a superstitious belief that it\nwill burn better because in Uu\nshape of the sacred mountain, as\nI have read elsewhere, but b\ncause the draft Is better thus, and\nto aid It still more she pierces a\nlittle hole below the lip of the\ntiny crater to admit tlie air.\nWhen the dainty lady has finished this to her satisfaction she\nrests her tiny hands on the edge\nof the brazier and holds out . her\nfingers    to    warm    them.\nAlthough so small the hibachi\nsoon warms the room, but in the\nwinter the drafts which the shoji\nadmit make the Japanese room\nrather uncomfortable for the westerner.\nEven in April we had one or two\nsnowy days, and one cowered rather\nmiserably around the hibachi and\nfinally demanded more, and in spite\nof being surrounded wilh two or\nthree one longed rather wistfully\nfor a good  blazing fire.\nGARAGE MEN\nREPORT MANY\nAUTO SALES\nNew Models and Used Cars\nChanging Hands Every\nDay\nThe popularity of the automobile\nis still increasing in the Kootenay\ndistrict as a whole, and especially\nso ln this **ity. Car sales continue\nto be heavy with all garages doing\na good share of tho selling. Several\nfreight cars of automobiles have\nyet to arrive in the city, and in\ntbe majority of cases the cars coming   have   been   spoken   for.\nSales of tbe past two weeks reported by local dealers are as follows :\nNelson Transfer company\u2014Charles\nWalker, Superior Chevrolet; A. b\nHarrison, New Denver, Superior\nChevrolet; J. Hopkins, frnkusp, Superior Chevrolet; F. M. Cishum.\nNakusp. Superior Chevrolet; K. Lu-\nkar, Kossland, Superior Chevrolet;\nM. H. Maloney, Nelson, Mclaughlin six. roadster; W. K. Keats. Nelson,    used    Hodge;     Fred    W.     Pepin.\nCrowth\nA'WORLD-FAMOUS   SIX   AT   $1465!\nScientifically balanced,\nholds the road at all speeds.\nAll-steei body. One-piece\nwindshield Luxurious,\ngenuine leather cushions,\n10 imchei deep. Cowl\n. SAendard non-slrjd\n\\.\nX     teem\nWe'll lend you a car\nto compare with other cars at near its price\nTHIS is an offer to anyone who is considering the purchase of a car in the\n$1500 field.\nWe invite you to take out a Studebaker\nLight-Six model for the sake of comparing\nit with other cars at near its price.   This\nwithout obligation to buy. ,\nEvery maker advances claims for bis car.\nSome are fair, some superlative; some are\nborne out by facts, others not.\nYou've been told this car, that car or\nanother is \"just as good\" as this famous\nStudebaker model. Now find out for yourself.   That's the only way to buy lasting\nsatisfaction, A\n%     .     .\nWhen you try this Studebaker Light-Six,\nyou will find an engine of remarkable power\nand flexibility\u2014an L-head engine designed\nand built by Studebaker: noted for its quiet\nand smooth operation; free from vibration\nbecause its crankshaft and connecting rods\nare machined on all surfaces, an exclusive\nStudebaker feature on cars at this price.\nYou will find surprising ease of handling,\nunusual comfort, roominess, obvious refinements and all the visible signs of a quality\ncar. You will find low price its only contrasting feature.\n\u00ab     \u00ab     *\nRemember, Studebaker is the world's largest quality car builder and thus is in position\nto give you the utmost for the least.\nBuy no car at $800 or more without making this test.  Don't buy blindfolded.\n11GHT.S1X SPECIAL-SIX B 1 C. \u25a0 S 1 X\n.\u2022Pa.     112-m.W.B.    10 HP 5-P\u00ab.    H9.rn.1V. B.   5011 P 7.Pea.   IU\u2014W.S.    60II. P.\nTourin, IMfe Wit,, >'000 M4   \u25a0   \u2022   \u25a0   \u25a0   \u2022   \u2022   \u25a0   \u00bb''***\nlailllM IT fit \u25a0   \u25a0    \u25a0    !\u00ab\u2022. Road.lcr(l.rj...l.   .    \u25a0   \u2022    \"70 Speed.nr (1-Paai.)   \u25a0    \u25a0   .    :'10\narfrpi.\"'.      !\u00ab5 ^o* \"\u25a0<*\u2022\u25a0\u2022  im c\u00ab..p.<\u00ab.iw.... .-\u00ab\nfedCa   ... ....   'i\u00bb fed\u2122 **\"*\u00bb' *\"d\" \"\"\"\nAll price! I. o. b. WattrrpJIW, OM\u201e tadnaux of Mna.   Term, lo mm yo.r nmejenln*.\nKOOTENAY   GARAGE,   N\u00bbl\u00bbon,   B.C. *\nXOOTBMAT   (14RAUB   CO.,   Trull,   B.C.\nS.   Me PHIBSOH,   Orsnel   Teirka,   B.C,\nntAHK   K.   DSIAI.I.,   Cranbrook,   B.O.\nSTUDEBAKER LIGHT SIX -. $1465\nmm\nWORK STARTS\nAT AO CAMP\nContractor Commences the\nErection of New Shelter\nand Camp House\nWork lias commenced on the construction of a ehelter and camp\nhouse at tlie Auto park, on Front\nstreet, the contract for which was let\nto W. Frost of Secoi.ll street, Kair-\nview, for a sum of approximately\n91300.\nLumber for the building has been\nplaced on the site and already the\nfloor joists und a portion If the floor\nhas hf-n completed. Sever';*I men will\nEM en | loved on the job at tho beginning of the week. The new build.\nng w|l stand in the center of tha\npark opposite to win -re ill\" present\nsmall fcuilding stands. .The approach\nto the building will be trom either\nend  of   the   park.\nNel\nTrail.\nYODERTELLS OF\nPOLECONTRACTS\nAND YARD WORK\nVice-President of Linclslev\nBros. Says Weslley Yard'\nIs Again in Operation\nA resume of th*- \\\\< rk being .-airb-d\n\"ii   In   Hie   wM-iuus   jeinh   of   Liiids|e\\\nBrothers Canadian Company,  limited,\ncedar   products,   and   i.-marks   on   the\npresent     mai kel     anl    new    husiic-s.-.\nHere    made    by    \\.    \\\\    Voiler.    vi< \u25a0\npresident  of  tli\" .nnipany,  yesterday.\n\"Down at .M.-ailows,\" lie said, I wv\nnre shipping tin- winter's output of\nhemlock logs for pulp, and expect to\nhave this nrder all c< nip].-ted bv\nJune 10.\"\nAs soon as tins work is comple**. d\nthe company will stnit work on another contract of n.ooo.ooo feet hem-\nlock logs whlcto it axpecti ta eul\nduring the summer.\n\"Tim \\v. itli y y.mls. whli h wittered\na disastrous loss by fire about   threi\nweeks aco, are open attain. l-'i- \u25a0\ndamages are being repaired rapidly,\nand tile company is gelling n-:ot\\\ntO  yard    12, \u25a0   cedar   poles.\nThese pules an- being bt might ilnv. ,i\nthe Columbia river from linrtoti city.\nand It ls expected they will be ready\nabout   July   l.r>.\nAt .Nakusp the company expects\nthe operations to include delivery in\nthe yards of about 25,000 cedar poles,\nthe majority of these coming from\nnear Arrowhead, from legging operations carried on during (lie past\nwinter.\nThe Nelson >,ird would again be\nsupplied from the Lardeau country,\nMr. Voder said, the supply amounting\nto around IL'.'im) cedar (voles, which\nwould be placed in the yard some\ntime  in July,\nCoast operations tire producing\nahout L'ii.ihhi piles this year, the majority   coming   off   the   Pacific   Gnat\nBash -rn    railway,    ami,    on    Vai iver\nllland, principally from around Dun-\n(Cfin,   Cumberland   iind   Cowichan   lake,\nMr. Voder said the compapy had\npractically concluded purchasing for\nthia year, and were not leaving any\nnew   contracts   for   the   present.\n\"New business is falling off somewhat In the Stales, and we believe\nthat the poles now ei ming In at\nfarlouH yarda will bo sufficient lo\nlake care of the requirements for the\n\u25a0J*mr. The company will, however.\nContract very heavily on the Arrow\nlakes and at points on Ihe Columbia\n; \\ci   north  of  Ilevclatoke,\"  the  pres-\nHnt coheludtd-i\nused      Chevrolet:      T\\     IS*.\n\u25a0.    used    McLaughlin    four.\nv.uht eonipnnv\u2014-K. T-^e',\nMsmobllo; 11. Wood, Trail.\n. de; R _t Smith. Trail. Ford\ntoyrlng; Campbell nnd llenrn, Salmo Ford lemming; \\V. Harkley, lien-\nton Ford roadster: C. Cu-tis, Trail.\nCord touring; Chnrles Iloli. Balfour: Ford light delivery: Mrs. A.\nGordon. Ford coupe; H. Clever. New\npen ver. Ford truck: H. H. Town-\nsend. Nelson, Ford truck; I >. Mr-\nDaniels. used Kludi b.'iker: p..\nused Overland; Chernoff 1\nSalmo, used ninmoiul T. tin\nSineilley'.s 0M*ftff<\u2014I'avid\nNelson, llodge touring: <1.\nmond     K,'isIo,    I'odgc    louring;    Hud- j\n\u25a0on'n  T\\n\\-  comoanv  Dodge  delivery;\nV.     Crtlickshank,     Willow     I'oint,     2-\n-mi    truck:     Jones    ,V     Clinton,     used ,\nDodire    touring;     James     Avis,     used ,\nFor.';     Marcus    Martin,    used    Dodge j\nCHEVROLET\nfirings Motoring Enjoyment\nto Every Canadian\nHOW great the service done for the Canadian People by Chevrolet cannot be\nestimated. How great the benefits it has\nbrought to them is beyond human ability to\nreckon.\nIt has provided them, at a cost unequalled in\nmotordom, with a means to speed up business,\nto inerease wealth, to better health, to bring\nfriends closer and to open up every part of\nthe whole country to every Canadian.\nThe fine quality, strength, endurance and full\nequipment provided by Chevrolet cannot be\npurchased for so little money anywhere else.\n, Moreover, the owner of a Chevrolet finds a\n\u2022 further satisfaction in the savings effected\nday by day as he drives his car. No other car\nbuilt can be run or maintained as cheaply as\nChevrolet.\nChevrolet cars are built in Canada by Canadian workmen. Every dollar you pay not only\nbuys a good-looking, comfortable car, but\nhelps build up a strong Canadian industry.\nC-111\nAsk About The C.M.A.C. Deterred Payment Plea\n\u00bb\nfcr Economic,' Transportation^.\nothM\nKc\nHop\nrk.\nK\nN'e.Nee\nT'itlio\nIIWe'1-\n\u2022InR:\nIII'       lielirillE:       \\\\>S|        KeeeetleH   IV\nIJghl company, Trail. Star\n!\u25a0;    r.eeek.   Trail.    Slar   t\"nr-\niirlim:\n.\u25a0el\nII   eel. !,.\u25a0    S\nPenny   A    I\nrlall'l: Carl\nSlnileliaUtT six:\nNflHeen, Star tourinc\nI -, e i ii 1. -.     Velseen,     Slar\nrail   Pearson,   Nelson.\nWilliam   Kherrtoliotoff,\nMi-LaiiKhlin.\n\u25a0vise,ii.     Slar\neVeque,    Trail.\nT.arseell,      N'rl-\nMax    llaskln.\nflcoTKO    T.'i-\nifMclal;   Con-\nSlar    ipMlall\nTarry*!   ttsetd\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\nDistrict Agents, Nelson, B.C.\nMore   than   halt   tlie   men   in   N'ew-\noundland  en  engated   tn  the   tuh-\nng industry.\n-^XT-\"-\u2014\ni rs\nthin  as   106   to the   inch ,\nwith    present-day   ma- |\nREAD THE ADVERTISEMENTS\nKnow What Is Best\nOld Method Web Cord Process\nthe New Web Cord Process\nThe Web Cord process unite;; thc cords hy saturating\nthem in latex, the natural sap of thc rubber tree, thus forming a web of pure rubber, insulating each cord from the\nother, eliminating cross threads which cause internal friction\nand destructive heat. Weh Cords lie Hat and even and take\nall strains with perfect uniformity.\nThe Web Cord process is used Exclusively in Canada\nfor building Dominion Royal Cord .ind U-cord Tires.\n1       Sprayed Rubber\nSprayed Rubber is the natural, pure rubber extracted\nvaporation, direct from the latex or rubber tree sap.\neliminating the u<c of imoke, coagulating acids or\nr processes used in preserving crude rubber.\nBy the Sprayed Rubber process, the finest and purest\n>cr and therefore the strongest and most elastic, is\nined. Sprayed Rubber is used exclusively in Canada\nthe walls and treads of Dominion Royal Cord and\nord Tires.\nI\nWeb Cords\nSprayed Rubber\n\u2014 These two advances in\ncord (ire building are\nexclusive for Dominion\nRoyal Cord and U-cord Tires.\nMore than ever they\nemphasize the premier\nposition of Dominion\nCord tires in Canada.\nDominionTires\nare GOOD   tires\nRoyal Cords \u2014 U=cords\n231\n _____\nPage TweWl\nINDIANA HAS A\nDARK HORSE FOR\nTHE DEMOCRATS\nSenator  Ralston  Is Being\nBoomed as Presiden-\n' tial Timber\nMcADOO SEEMS\nOUT OF RACE\nRugged Hoosier Candidate\n\u2022 Is Presented as Stronger\nThan Governor Smith\nCanadian Presa CorrrepoikkiH\nby BEN DEACON\nNEW YORK, May 9.\u2014Within the\npaat few days the city and state of\nNew York have been flooded with\ncopies of a little pamphlet on the\nfirst page of whie'h are pictures of\nSamuel Toffett Ralston of Indiana\nand the late Qrover Cleveland.\nUnder the pictures Is the line. \"These\n\u2014t   \u2022\n<-\"**n   ^B\nWlt_\nJN^s           *\u25a0\n\u25a0*  \/ '\nm\n_^                    '*W_W_\\\nMl\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014WW-.\ny_\\\n\u25a0\nfcc \/    ^_\\ I\nXT'\n___ _ti\nV    ' .sf_\\\nGOVERNOR   AL.   SMITH\nmen   look   alike;    does   the   resemblance end here?\"\nCleveland   was   selected   as   presi\ndential nominee by the Democratic\nconvention of 1884, and swept the\ncountry In the subse-juent elections.\nWill the Democratic convention of\n1924 increase the -\"resemblanoe\"* by\nselecting Senator Rn.l*ton as standi\nard-hearer? This is the question political observers here have been asking\u2014and, many of them, attempting\nto answer\u2014since the circulation of\nthe pamphlet brought the boom to\nthe   eaBt.\nNine    in    Ten    Say    \"Ralston\"\nTlie majority seem to hold the\nview that \"thf dark horse which\npastures in tlie Hoosier state\" stands\na very good chance of being the\nchoice of the coirvenfion. One ap\nparenlly unbiased , writer declares\nthat if you ask those who pre>\ntend to be in closest touch with\nto the choice of the Madison Square\nthe Democratic political situation\nGarden gathering \"nine times out\nof  ten  the  answer  will  be, Ralston.\"\nSenator Kalston has been mentioned from time time tn connection with the Democratic nomination, but it is only recently that\nthe Ralston boom has assumed any\nthing like national proportions, lt\nwas fathered by former United\nStates Senator Thomas Taggart, the\nleader of the party in Indiana,\nwho Is a lifelong frlenM and an\nardent admirer of Ralston. Tom\nTaggart ls one of the state leaders\nwho wield a great power in the\nnational convention. He was lined\nup with Charles F. Murphy, the\nTammany boss of New York, and\n(Jeorgo S. Brennan, Democratic\nmogul of Illinois, ln a campaign\nto prevent William (jlbbs iMcAdoo\nfrom becoming the party's nominee.\nThe three big leaders were hostile\nto McAdoo largely because when\nhe was in the Wilson cabinet he\nfailed to play the party game in\nthe matter of appointments. The\ndisclosure before the senate oil committee that McAdoo had been retained as an attorney for the Do-\nheny interest turned the trick for\nthem. McAdoo is now believed to\nbe definitely out of the running,\nthough a faithful few of his old\nadmirers continue to work valiantly\ndevote   to   other   things.\nRecently ho has been occupied\nfor him, and Taggart haa time to\nchiefly in attempting to demonstrate\nto his friends Murphy and Rrennan\nand, incidentally, a host of lesser\nleaders, that Ralston is the man\nthey require for a candidate If\nthe party is to have a decent chance\nof winning the election. The New\nYork  and   Illinois  leaders were  both\nFor Bladder Trouble\nAU such disorders as scanty or too\ndust deposits in thc urine-, or a\nvoiding urine, are entirely\ndue to disordered kidneys. To\nright such symptoms you\nmust first restore your kidneys to their normal condition. Gin Pills go right to\nthe kidneys relieving them of\ncongestion and so quickly rid\nyou of all bladder trouble.\nBefore a more serious condition arises get the one specific remedy\u2014Gin Pills\u201450c a\nbox everywhere.\nNATIONAL  PR1 C.   H  (-HEMN'Al.\nCOMPANY of CANADA, LIMITED\nI eeliieil.e.    Hiel.eieee\nfrequent urination, brick\nburning sensation when\nJ5L\nFILLS\n^\u2022^roRTHEjPC\nCANADA DRUG & BOOK COMPANY\nNELSON,   B.C.\nHASH\nCORD TIRES\nThey carry you\nsafely, surely and\npunctually to\nyour destination\n\"Qaa\/ity all Through\"\n3\nGutkftrdia&Rutbcr\nLimited\nHe.ad Office & Factories\nToronto\nBninches from\nCoast to Coast. Qb\nm\nIN\n90\nno\nTHE NELSON D#AILY NEWS, SATURDAY MOfc'NlNG, MAY 10,1&24\nunderstood to be rather favorable\nto Alfred B. Rmith, governor of\nNew York, but there are Indication*\nthat Ttt&jmrt hn* Won th\u00abm over,\nvictory with Smith at the head of\nthe ticket would be doubtrul, despite the fact that he has unexpectedly won delegates ln several western states. Hla religion\u2014for no\nRoman Catholic has ever been elected president of the United States\u2014\nhla decided \"\"Wet\" leanings, and\ntho rural wosl'a diwilko for New\nYorkers, all -would prove ferloitu obstacles, and It seems likely that\nAl will be told to wait a while.\nHe is a good Tammany man, and\ncan be counted upon to obey the\nbig boas. Only once has he raised\na serious rumpus in the Wigwam,\nand that was when an attempt\nwas mads to foist William Randolph\nHearst upon him ns ft runrtin\u00ab matt.\nHe won out, and Hearst was left\nin the cold upon that occasion.\nHowever, this time he is expected\nto do as he is told, and the chances\nare tha), he will be told to forget\nthe presidential bee that buzzes in\nhis car and accept the nomination\nfor the governorship ohce more.\nSmith Good But Hasn't a Chance\n\"Governor Smith ls a good fellow,\" said Taggart In a recent interview, \"but Al hasn't a chance\nthis year. When lt comes to the\nmatter of selecting a candidate for\npretident New York will not be\nconsidered this year. The Democrat!\nwill look to the middle west, the\nvalley of democracy, and there is\nonly one man with the qualities\nthat inspire conviction that he could\nwin hands down. That man is\nSf.m Raleton of Indiana. Governor\nSmith  hasn't  a  chance,.\"\nThe prospect of victory with Ralston heading the ticket Is being\nstressed by Taggart and his allies.\nThe little pamphlet which brought\nthe Ralston boom here from the\nwest declare! that \"Ralston is a\nperfect example of what politicians\ncall an available candidate, He ls\nattractive, has a good record, he\ngets on with party leaders and hie\nindependence is not of a kind that\nmakes trouble.\"\nSenator Ralston is not an avowed\ncandidate for the nomination, and,\naccording to the reported plans of\nhis supporters, he will not become\none. He will not make a bid for\ndelejgates in any of the .states\nwhich hold presidential preference\nprimaries; that is, he will not go\nbefore the voters of his party seeking to have delegates instructed to\nsupport him. Taggart and his lieutenants, however, are conducting a\nwidespread campaign to commit\nprospective delegates to the convention to Senator Ralston as their\nsecond choice. It ls doubtful whether\nthe Hoosier senator will havo more\nthan the vote of the delegation of\nhis own state in the early ballots,\nbut wheir the proper moment conjes\nTaggart hopes to be able to roll\nup support for his man in the convention. He Is banking on a deadlock and his ability to convince\nthe other party leaders that in the\ncandidature of Ralston lies their\nhope of carrying the country.\nNot    Seeking    Prize\nRalston has repeatedly asserted\nhis hat is not in the ring. \"I\nhave repeatedly said that I am not\nintending to seek the nomination\nfor president,\" he declared the\nother day, but in spite of that he\nwill undoubtedly listen to reason\nand Tom Taggart. In a recent interview he admitted that it was by\nno means unpleasant to hear himself\nspoken of in connection with the\npresidency. \"Any man should con\nslder It an honor to be even men\nUoned   for  the  presidency,\"   he  said.\nVery little opposition to Ralston\nhas been expressed with in the\nparty ranks, probably because the\ntactful Taggart in fostering the\nboom has carefully avoided arou*\ning the hostility of supporters of\nother aspirants for the nomination\nThe chief objections that have been\nput forward are on the score of\nRalston's age and his conserva\ntism. His biography in the Congressional Record states that he\nwas born December 1, 1867. This\nmeans that if he should be elected\nhe would be 67 years old before\nhe took office and would be 71\nbefore the end of his term. But\nRalston is as hale and hearty as\nmany a man of 50. He still plays\na good game of baseball; ls an\nexpert with rifle or shotgun, and\nputs in a lot of hunting each year.\n\"He will be going strong 15 years\nfrom now whether he Is president\nor not,\" Taggart said in discussing\nthe  age  question.\nThe second objection, and, Incidentally, the first as well, was answered the other day when the\nIndiana senator made a radical\nspeech on the tax situation with\nsuch fire and vigor as to amaze his\n\u2022colleagues.\nSenator Ralston comes of sturdy\nstock. His great-grandfatehr was\nScotch; on his maternal side his\nforebears were Scotch-Irish who\nthrew in their lot with the American colonists. He was born in\nOhio, but moved into Indiana with\nhis parents when 8 years of age,\nacquired a taste for sassafras tea\nand became a 100 per cent Hoosier.\nHis father was a stock farmer with\na 400-acre ranch, but the panic\nof 1873 depleted the family fortune, and young 8am was obliged\nto earn his own living at an early\nage. And in this connection there\nis an incident which throws an Interesting   ligtyt   upon   his   character.\nYoung Sam Ralston was driving\n| a flock of sheep along the highway\nwhen an elderly friend encountered\nhim, bringing word that the county\nsuperintendent of schools wished him\nto  present   himself  for  examination\nfor a teacher's licence. The young\nshepherd expressed doubts as to\nhie ability to pass the examination.\n\"I think you'll get a certificate,\"\nWild the messenger, taking stock\nof Ralston, who was a youth of\nconsiderable bulk and Wftlght.\nLicked   -Hard-Soiled   Big   Boy*\nRalston passed the examination,\nreceived hla licence and was assigned to a school But there was\na little Joker In the appointment.\nTha superintendent had been In\ndpfipnir over that school because the\nscholars were hard-boiled young\ntoughs who had driven several incumbents from the ' school house.\nRalston tackled this school. The\nhorse play and attempted intimidation began on the first day, but\nhe kept his temper and tried to\nwin the friendship of the boys.\nHa continued this pacific system\nfor several weeks, then came to the\nconclusion that patience and .moral\nsuasion were getting him nowhere.\nOne day he went Into the woods,\ncut an armful of substantial sticks,\nreturned to the school house, locked\nthe door and put the key in hla\npoflket,\nCalling up tha biggest and toughest boy he licked him in a stand-\nup fight. He then licked the other\nringleaders in turn, repulsed a concerted assault entailing some minor\ncasualties, unlocked the door, had\nthe broken furniture cleared out,\nand returned achool. And thereafter he had  model  pupils.\nThere came a day when Ralston\nmet a similar, though more serious,\nsituation by similar* tactics, and hie\ncourage and resourcefulness upon\nthat occasion won him a reputation that may help him In the\npresent political contest. But between these two crises In a far\nfrom uneventful career Ralston did\nmany things.    Among them were:\nJoined the village debating society and acquired the knack of public speaking; studied law in the old-\nfashioned way by reading books in\na law office; hung out an attorney's sign at Lebanon, Ind.; developed a large prosperous practice;\nbecame Lebanon's leading citizen;\nentered state politics and occupied I\nseveral Important party offices; wae\nelected governor of his state.\nCalled   Out  Militia  -\nIt was while he was governor\nthat the second spectacular incident of his career occurred. In\n1918, the second year of his term,\na street car strike, called on the\neve of a municipal election, tied up\ntraffic in Indianapolis. The situa-\nton became critical. There were disorders in the streets, cars operated\nby    strike-breakers    being    attacked\nand A number of people Injured.\nThe city administration, not anxious\nto estrange the labor vote, took no\naction. Then Rataton, after failing\nin an attempt to bring about arbitration, ordered out the National\nguard. The day after the arrival\nof the soldiers a great crowd of\nstrikers and their sympathisers gathered on the state house lawn and\nd-emanded the withdrawal of the\ntroops. The governor, despite the\nwarnings of friends that he was\nplacing himself In danger, walked\nout and met the men. In simple,\nstraightforward    language    he    told\nthem he had taken an oath to\ndefend the peace and dignity of\nthe state, and he Intended to do\nIt. Viol#ice proved nothing and ac-\naccomplished nothing, he declared, and\nthe controversy could only be settled In the court of reason. Before long the men were cheering\nhim. An atmosphere of amity was\ncreated by his address, and ln a\nshort time the traffic was resumed\nand the warring parties arbitrated\ntheir  differences\nPaid  Off State Debt\nEquable, tolerant and kindly, Ralston la at the same time forceful\nand when aroused he Is a valiant\nfighter. Once he decides upon a\ncourse of action he cannot be\nswerved from it by threat or cajolery. He is a good mixer, talks\nwell, and possesses a sense of\nhumor. He has a keen mind, and\nis a close student of economic\nproblems. When he waa elected governor of the state he promised to\npay off the state debt, which had\nbeen a campaign issue for years.\nDuring his term of office he not\nonly paid of the debt, but, on his\nretirement, he let a surplus* of *|3,-\n000,000   in   the  treasury.\nHe was elected to the United\nStates senate In 1922,*defeating Albert J. Beveridge despite heavy odds.\nHis ability to swing Indiana into\nthe Democratic column two years\nago against an experienced and\nbrilliant adveasary when the betting\nwas something like 90 to 1 against\nhim helped to bring him to the attention of Democratic lenders In\nconection with the presidential nomination, and has proved a fine argument for Tom Taggart in his campaign to convince his party confreres that they must have Samuel\nRalston  tb  win.\nOne of the best things to be done\non a vacation, and one of the things\nmost seldom done, ls to get a good\nrest\nCongress hopes to adjourn June 1.\nThe United States will heroically sustain the shock.\nFORMER TREASURY OFFICIAL TESTIFIES\nC.   R.  SPROULE\nFormer assistant provincial treasurer cf Ontario, testified before the public  accounts committee  of the  legislature regarding  Interest on  provincial |\ndeposits.\nCUT\nOUT\nNo. 3\nFREE\nPaste the pieces shown here together\nproperly and you'll have a weird animal.\nSend it to us and we will mail you\nBOOK   OF\nCUT-OUTS\nIt   contains  a   whole    menagerie   of\n\"Freakies\" with a verse for each one.\nAlso tells how Windsor Table Salt and Regal\nSalt (free running! are made from the purest\ndeposit on the continent. Mention this paper\nand send name and address. Write to\nWindsor Salt, Windsor, Ont.\nAlso Makers of .1\n&EGALTABLESALT\n^   PREtt  RUNNING\n\/ '\n__-\nbefore You Invest,\n' Investigate\nIn an < effort to become wealthy,\nmen and women lose millions of\ndollarseachyear in \"get rich quick\"\nschemes. . They do not sufficiently\ninvestigate.\nOut of,each hundred dollars 'invested,\" the portion that is put into life\ninsurance does good work, because\n87% of estates have only life insurance to show in the end. Most\npeople find it impossible to create\nan estate in any other way.\nIf all were to learn this lesson early\nin life, the comfort and success of\nmany families would be vastly improved. Why not secure all you\ncan of Life Insurance,--the safe,\nscientific method of building an\nestate?\n\u2014Life Insurance Service\n \t\nTHE NEESON DSLY NEWS. SXTUSDS? EORNTNG, SKY lu, 1922\nPage'TErSeen\n3\nTamatco\na\u2014\u2014\u2014\u25a0\u2014\u25a0 \u00bb\u25a0 \u25a0 MM I \u25a0    I Ml II 11,-ffc\n*t**U  COTTQM wQOO vim IP  \"*N\u00abi.iJ\n\"The Universal Wallboari\"\n:hitects Choose It-\nitractors Use It\ntects and contractors often have difficulty In seeing\neye on building materials generally, but Job after Job\n'ed that La mat co Is ah Bulutely the right thing for up-\njinute interior finishing. Have you our samples and\n\u2022eon   file?\nFor  Sale  By\nOD-VALLANCE HARDWARE CO.. LTD.\nNELSON, B.C.\nManufactured By\nLAMINATED   MATERIALS   CO.,   LTD.\nNew Westminster,   B.C.\nvmg\nlada\nBy confining its activities exclusively to domestic business and by\nrelying upon powerful financial institutions abroad for our customers' foreign needs, this Bank believes it can best serve Canadians\nand Canadian industry. Whatever\nyour banking requirements,whether at home or abroad, this Bank\ncan   adequately serve you. 4\"\nIPERIAL BANK\nOF  CANADA.\nINCH, \u2022 \u2022 \u25a0 J. H. D. BENSON, Manage:\n: BRANCH, . \u25a0 \u2022 W. R. GRUBBE, Manager\n(ANCH, \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 -       C W. ALLEN, Managei.\nYOUR MONEY\nIN ENGLAND\nTF you have lunds in sterling\n* in the Old Country which\nyou desire, to use in Canada,\nour Manager will gladly quote\nyou a rate for their transfer.\nAny of our Branches will make\nall arrangements for you through\nour London Office, where money\nmay he left on depositkawaiting\ntransfer.\nTHE ROYAL BANK\nOF CANADA\nKelion A I). McLeod. Mgr.; Cran-\nbruok 11 F. Marsh. Mgr; Grind\nTotki--U. A Sliiik. Mgr; rorral-i A.\nWutHon,   Mgr.\nUSE EUGENICS\nTO KEEP DOWN\nDEBASED STOCK\nOtherwise Present Civilization will Sink From Inward Deterioration\nSTODDARD'S NEW BOOK\nANALYZES THE REVOLT\nSince Beginning: of History\nCivilizations Have Fallen\nby Impoverishment\n\"THE   REVOLT  AGAINST CIVILIZATION\"\u2014 Lothrop   Stoddard\n(Reviewed by Isabel Forin, Nelion)\nMnmenttius UotflfkNU disrovertes\nof past -fffnt'r.itlona- -to the effect\nth.-it (| utility Is determined by heredity\nand not hy environment\u2014reveal laws\nof life which explain social and political unrest of today. I'tvllizaUons become wrecked from within. Per pies\nbecome stagnant and decadent, and\nare unable to bear the burden of\n'\u25a0Ivilization. nor have ihey the capacity  to   further   it.\nIt can be destroyed in two days:\nBackward Peonies Peacefully\nPen ttrate\nJ. Some stocks are not only incapable of orlRinatinK a civilization.\nbut are incapable of assUmilatln^\nthe civilization cf others. They may\nacquire a veneer of civilization, but\nwill ultima'tely revert lo harharism.\nThe more backward peoples of the\nearth tend Increasingly to n,-el* the\ncenter!; of civilization, a (tract oil bv\nhitfh w.iRes and easier living conditions. Thus they become a meftacf\nto us, threatening ns with \"peaceful\npenetration.\" Tlie results of 'this\nwould   be\n1. Mvlng   standards   upset.\n2. Higher   native   stocks   socially\nsterilized.\nft, In evil able m( njjrelized population sunk to I lower plane.\n2. WhM social environment. Improving from generation to generation, outruns human ability, which\nin the entire period of human history has shown no increase, then a\ndecline in civillzalion takes place.\nThroughout hlstrry these declines\nhave taken place in every highly developed   society.\nClvliizat ion is based on selected\nstocks thnt have survived primitive\nconditions, and arc therefore strong\nnnd capable of building up a civilization. This latter, however, opened\nup such opportunities and responsibilities to the mere superior strains\nof people that they were diverted\nfrom racial ends to social and Individual ends, and thus racial impoverishment takes place. The inferior strains, instead of being eliminated as formerly, survived and multiplied. Civilizations in the past have\nthus been blighted; dtain<d of their\nsuperiors, and saturated with degenerates and dullards, th-'.v have sunk\nto a lower le\\el, or eollapsvd in utter\nruin.    ,\nInferior Strains Multiply\nCivilisations are made up if three\nclasses\u2014superiors, intermediates and\ninferiors. \u25a0 The superiors found and\nfurther civilizations, the intermediates accept their achievements, but\nthe Inferior are instinctively its vv -\nemies. They are innately Incapable\nof keeping pace with It . The social\nnrd\"r thwarts and chastises tlo-m,\nso they fight against it. These include degenerates and insane, and as\nsegregation is only very limited, they\nare multiplying at an alarming rate.\nand in a much larger proportion than\nsuperior stocks, and arc in some cases\necntaminating these.\nSocial revolutions of the present\n\u25a0*%y are largely due to the revolt of\nthese tindermen. Holshevists and anarchists are, on examination, found\nto belong to its ranks. Civilization.\nas it exists today, has no place for\nthem, and so they, attempt tc destroy\nit   and   its champions,\nlaOlhrop Stoddard advocates the\nuse ef eug'-nlc measures to combat\nthis evil.\nCATCH ONTARIO SUCKERS WITH DIP-SETS\nFishing  for  suckers  is  a seasonal\nfish  are  running  now   in   the   river,   en\nscenes on   the  Humber,  two  fishermen\niccupution\n\u25a0 \u25a0ii,  bnok\nwith-a   si\nALL  THE  HARVEST  ISN'T GATHERED  IN  THE  FALL\n1 that requir'-s a combination of fact, good Judgment, patience, dexterity and long experience. The\nmil little streamlet in Ont ario. and the cat citing process is in full swing. Tho photos above are\nall   percentage   of   their   catches, and   the  dip-net enthusiasts hard  at   it.\nJUDGE FINDS DOG\nKILLING JUSTIFIED\nAnimal Invaded Pasture at\nNight and Attacked Colt;\nMerited Its Death\nOTTAWA. May 9\u2014(Hy Canadian\nPress*. Is a man justified In killing u neighbor's dog if it trespasses on and attempts to destroy\nhis property at night? This question came up in Hull police court\nthe other dav when lsidor- Ihiheau\nof Itanforil Lake sued Clifford (Jib-\nso n of the same place for >^it, the\nvalue he placed on a dog, which\nthe latter acknowledged be had\nkilled on the night of .)i;ne .1 last\nyear when he found it attacking a\ncolt in tlie field adjacent to his\nhome.\n.lodge Millar was of the opinion\nthat the act was Justified, and dismissed (be case against (iihson.\n.Judge Mdlar slated in dismissing\nthe charge that if a man might\nshoot a thief who entered his house\nat night with intent to steal oi\ndestroy lie was certainly entitled\nto du the same to a dog, an 1 the\nonus of responsibility rested on the\nowner   of   the   animal.\nBritish Artist\nVisiti America\n. D IS BOTH CHEAP AND EFFICIENT. TRY IT.\n! AUGUSTUS   JOHN\nI       Has   arrived   at    New   York,   for\nj tour ot tbe continent.\nHOWUNCLESAM\nVIEWS CANADA\nIS SUMMARIZED\nDominion a Body of Snow\nSurrounded by Rum-\nRunners, Stringer's Hit\nIffBW YOKK. Mav it. - .V delightful travesty of \"How t'nele Sam Sees\nCanada\" is given by the Canadian\nauthor, Arthur Stringer. in the\ncurrent issue of the .Maple Lea!',\nofficial organ of the Canadian Cluh\nof New  York,     In  part, this   wads:\nOmnia nintantur, as they us.d to\nsay on (lie Tiber. Whet 1 went\nfrom Canada to Oxford, \u25a0 good\nmany years ago, my professor uf\nI ireek asked tne how I go| along\non English roast mutton after so\nmany winters on whale blubber.\nLast spring, when 1 came from\nCanada to the Cnited States, every\nsecond New Yorker looked me earnestly in the eye and asked me\nwhat brand of Scotch I'd brought\ndown   with   me.\nAnd then s, t me to thinking. It\nreminded me how little my native\ncountry was understood on the\nAmerican   side   of   the   line.\nSo, being of an investigative turn\nof mind, I occupied by idle days\nfor I'm only an author and have,\nof course, practically nothing to do\n\u2014trying to get some general idea of\nJohnny Canuck.\nHaul   Wheat  ami   Liquor\nCanada, I found, was a large body\nof snow completely surrounded by\nrum-runners. It grows the hardest\nwheat and the hardest liquor to\nbe found on the continent. Alonf\nthe Hay of Fundy it has the highest\ntides and along the st, Uiur-nee\nthe highest birth rate in tlie world.\nHut it's so cold that the nouveau\nriche of Quebec still build their\ncountry palaces out of ice blocks,\nthe 400 of Montreal wear ear muffs,\na | 1 the humble habitant grows his\nfavorite musknielons with fur on to\nkeep    them    fnun    ll'eezing.\nIt is a country which boasts of\nan organization known as tlie Canadian Pacific railway, which offi-\ncially built the Canadian Koekies;\nof a humorist known as < 'Id Sieve\nLea cock, who pokes you in the rib-;\nwith   one   hand   while   he   (imps   in*^\nbitter   pill   of   political   economy   down\nyour   throat   with   the   other,   and   ol\nan    optimist    named    Stefansson,    w lm\nflirts   with   the   polar   icebergs.\nSome Tonkins al   Hotkey\nIt's a ' land of modest worker-\"\nwho discover insulin and distill Canadian Club and perfect helium gas,\nand sell polished steel horns to\nthe tourists\nIt's a land of briar pipes and\ntilled Stetsons and big rpen; a laud\nof wonderful scenery and weird\nhotels; a land of far loo man.\nrailways ami at tha sane- time not\nhalf enough; a land that plays its\nown game in its own, profess.-s tn\nbe no world healer at baseball bm.\nipiietly acknowledges itself the v-v>\nold    devil    at     hockey.\nIt if I land thai claims a flrat\nmortgage on the n< rlh pole yet ,-ui\nKilling dead because h.: called n\n\"Our I.adv of the Minus,\" a kind\nwhere it is as impolite to bn ithe\n,t word aiiout wind t* tempera t u i \u25a0\nas   it   is  to  speak   of  tli\"  \"earthquake\"\niti   lan   rmaelMO,     it   is   a   laud\nwhere    the    visaing    sport.-man    pur-\nGALL1-CURCI AT BREAKFAST TABLE\nla   tins   sket, h   the   oilier   figure   is\npapist of Atueiita  Gallt-Cwr-ci,  tha si:\nHomer  Samuels,   husband   and .\nr   of   grand   . pera.\nsues    the    lordly    moose    through    the\nun milled    pulp   wooda   and    at    the\nsame I line a land w lie re you can't\nthrow a snowball without hitting\na Wtll-known poet. It is \u25a0 land\nwhere the rapids tumble joyously\nand the mining stocks do the same\nonly With less iiti't-riment; wb-re\nthey say \"Chocoda\\\" for Tuesday\nand go curling on their frozen\nrivers, and where they refuse to\nsell you ice cream on Sunday.\nSang Men for Munler\nIt's a broad-brimmed melting pot\nwhere titles are officially forbidden\nami   frowned   on  as  the   natives  fall\nover one another in the scramble to\n_e\\ one. It's a land where the\nthermometer drops to 20 degrees\nbelow zero, but. us tlo-ii* sou t lie r u\nneighbors say, \"It's a dry cold and\nyou   don't   feel   it.\"\nThey export dried cod and Import\nstill drier thaaterlcal amusement\nThey sit through pictures and plays\nthat travesty their own life, remembering, probably, that they are citizens of a country where men are\nstill   hanged   for   murder.\nThey have a sobering strain of\nScotch In their makeup to balance\nihe kind that,- isn't sobering, the\ntrue Caledonian strain that still\neats oatmeal for breakf ml and believes in the Larger Catechism nnd\nkeeps the Sabbath and anything else\nit  can  lay Its  hands on.\nNo financial adjustment has been\nmad.- between  Vancouver harbor com-\nn;iss;.i its and board of grain commissi ners [or tile surplus grain remaining ia --tore In the government\ngrain elevator at Vancouver on August i, 1922, when the harbor hoard\ntook possession, This was revealed\nIn an answer to a question In the\nhouse of commons, wh!e,h added that\nthere was I37.M2 bushels of all grains\nai d *-''  \u25a0.'\u25a0\u25a0 lbs. i f screenings on hand\nat   that   date.\nThe thinnest thread visible to tlie\nhuman e\\e is so small thai it would\nlake a bin,,lie nf a thousand of them\nlo e.'nal the diameter of a woman's\nhair. These threads are made from\nmelted quarts.\nThe late Father Thomas Whalen\nof Chicago was the author of the\nwords (f \"The Rosary,\" generally\ncredited to Robert Cameron Rogers,\nfriends of Sister Mary Kmlly of\nMount Si. (iertrude academy, a sister\nof father Whalen, asserted at Boulder, ('ok. after Sister Mary Kmlly'a\nfuneral.\nSince   thf   discontinuation   of   work\noil   the   Hudson    Hav   railway   in    1917,\nreplied Hon A. P. Copp, secretary of\nstate, ; reply to a question in the\nhouse of ei mmons, the expenditure\non    the    Welland   cftnal    amounts   to\n^fi.iiLii,:!*] and on the Trent ,-aiial\nto J I,**;::i. 1\".. The above expenditure,\n.Mr. Copp explained, an* subsequent to\nMarch 111,  PH.v\nOi \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0>\u25a0\u25a0\u2022   M.   Caldrr,  a   native   son  of\nMedi, ine  Hat,  was called  to  the  bar\nin   the gas city  by Chief Justice  Harvey   i f   Alberta.\nA Century of\nRoyal Patronage\nThe beautiful finish and\ndistinctive designs of\nB rown's     Shamrock\nLinen have held Royal\npatronage for over a\ncentury, and have won\nworld-wide supremacy\nover all other household linens,\nA -k y.ittr dealer to show\nyou this famous line.\nBHO>VN'S\nSHAMROCK\nPVttm IRISH\nLINEN\nlU'llHsl,\nIreland.\nJohn S.\nHmuii A\nu.t.i.t Ltd.,\nGOVERNMENT\nREPORTS SHOW tha\nless than one-fourth\nof all the Coffee Imported\ninto the United States\nis high-grade\u2014\nwhich is the quality that goes to\nmake up the hlcnd of\n\"Barrington Hall\"\nso we cannot hope to have all\nthe people use this brand\u2014\nthere i.STi't enough to go 'found\nYet Batrington Hall is not\nexpensive in actual use, due to\nreasons fully demonstrated by\nResearch Work of the highest\nscientitic authority (Mass. Institute of Technology, Boston.)\nVi'e give tuo briefly:\u2014\n(1) Prepared by the Baker-iilng\nProcess In wlilch the roasted bean U\ncut\u2014 not meishcd \u2014to a fine, even gram*,\nlation that in 2 to 2,'j minutes contact\nwith water {hcleew the boiling temperature) re leases 80'r of the aromatic oil\u2014\nthe one and only element which make*\nthe cup of coffee good to the taste and\ninvigorating.\n(2) In the Baker-tzing Process is\nremoved all dust, chaff and foreign matter, so the cans contain\nnothing hut the weight of full\nstrength coffee.\nBMYingfoiHfafl\nGtfftee\nComes in 3 forms\n(1) BAKER-IZED\nfor Cotfcc Pots and Percal*tot\u00bb\nin 1-2-3 and 5-lb* Sealed Tim.\n(2) PUL-VO-DRIP\nfor Drip Coffee\nln 1-2-3 and 5-lb. Sealed Tim.\n(3) SOLUBLE\nfur Instant Coiitc, made In Cup.\nGrounds Removed\u2014Drinkabld\nPart Crystal i:c*d, and Vacuum\nSealed \u2014in Medium Si\u00ab and\nLar^c Size Glass Jars.\n!    AnJ vou **iM like Barrington HaJl TEA\nO-ause !>!-..,<\u25a0\u25a0 (HU-kJ UM J*|\u00bb\u00abn (Ore-en) *\nFor Camoin-y L'jc ihe Larger Pack-ga\nBAKER IMPORTING COMPANY\nl'-_\\.uti .ii'\" --\u25a0 t \u25a0.-\"\u00bb '-I-\" \u00bbt lUker-wr* eFVnowi\nStar Grocery\nPHONE  10\nCiGARET\nKitO t\\nO E\\tm Fine 20 ^r25\n\u25a0\n \u2014^\u2014~m\n '\u2014*\u2014\u2014*\u2014\u2014**\u2014\t\nPajge Fniirfeaal\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING, MAY 10,1924\nREALISM NOW\nTHETENDENCY\nIN LITERATURE\nInspector   Sheffield   Pun-\ngently Criticizes Contemporary Writing\nMERCENARY IDEAL   .\nDEBASES PRODUCT\nWorth-While Canadian Publications Can Only Evolve\nWith Support\nBy IV H. SHEFFIELD\nJust 360 years ago, on April 23,\nwas born, and 30 yenra ago that day\nthere died, the greatest author who\never wrote in nny language. That\nday was the anniversary of the\nbirth and the anniversary of th*'\ndeath of the im mortal William\nShakespeare.\nVery many years ago a great\nwriter, John Rusk in, addressed an\naudience in this manner: \"[ \\vi\\nt\nto talk to you about books and\nhow we rend them, and how we\ncould or should read them.\" Tlie\nproblem was very simple in his\nday. Many of the people in England could not read at all There\nwere comparatively few books and .\ncomparatively few readers. Yet the\nbooks were nearly all good books,\nand were written by men who had\nhut one aim\u2014-not to amass sudden wealth, but to write abOUt life\nin good English In such a way that\nthe   work   would   live\nThroughout all the ages there lias\nbeen a distinction between those\nauthors to whom writing is an art\ngoverned by rules, who minister\nto a reading public of connoisseurs educated by criticism, one the\none hand, and those who use writing as a means of direct popular\nappeal, to whom subject matter is\neverything and to whom rules of\nform nnd style nre unimportant, on\nthe other hnnd.\nEverybody Writes Now\nToday there are so few of the\nformer bat the number of tbe latter\nis legion. Milton phrased the old\nideal when be said he Sought \"'\"\nleave something so written to after-\ntimes that they would not willingly\nlet it dies.\" They aspired to\ngreatness in point of time Today\nthe success of a writer is measured in space in the wiile extent\nof his temporary appeal. The modern writer aspires to possess the\nwhole of tbe reading public for a\nfew years rather than a \"fit audience,   though   few.\"    for   centuries.\nAgain,    men    of    letters    no    long'\nform   nn   exclusive   c;\nno   longer   a   set    of\nwhom   the   reading   i\nguidance    in    it*     tAl\nf-tBsion   of   writing   U\nas   are    painting    nnd\nposition    by    an    exa\nWhch   must   first    Lias  everybody   reads,   **\u25a0\nbody   writes.   Of   tht\nsincere. You never know what is\nin your soap, and flannel, but you\nknow exactly what is ln my books,\nand if you aren't pleased you don't\nbuy. My specialty ls that the public\nwants printed matter.\"'\nThe first influence of democracy\nin literature has been to increase\nit in amount, and the second has\nbeen to diversify it. The reading\npublic ls now too large to be\nguided by any one dominant interest, either in thought or form.\nDown   to   Realities\nPerhaps in this period there is\nonly one paramount literary tendency; that is, the interest of the\npublic in realities, in the facts that\ngovern our little life here upon\nearth. As tho literature of today\nhaa become directed more to the\npeople of one generation, or even\nof one year; that is, has become\nmore contemporary nnd Journalistic\nin its appeal, so our realism has\nbecome more penetrating and sensational. The result has been to\nmake our writers emphasize subject matter nnd forget form. The\nnovel is no longer a careful balance of characters in a well-on\\red\nplot; it is an assemblage of facts\nand people in that accidental and\npromiscuous association that is characteristic   of  real   life.\nOf course, realism is not a new\nthing; it is the impressionistic aspect\nof it that is new. Virgil was a\nrealist in one sense. Tennyson describes   him   ns:\n\"Thou\nthat\nland.\nsing\nest\nwheat\nand\nwood-\nTilth\nand\nvint\n-vat\n*d, hive\nand\nhorse\nind  herd;\nAll   th.\n\u2022   ch;\nirm\nof\nall   the\n\u25a0   muses\nOftei\ni   flo\nwe ril\niff :\nin a lonely\nword.\"\nste. There is\ni few men to\niblic looks for\ne. The prn-\nnot   protected\n4. -lust\nly every-\no   do   so.\nVirgil is realistic in his statement,\n\"A cold tremor ran through the\nhard lioncs of the Trojans.\" The\nbones were hard because they were\nstiff with terror. A great artist\nnever exhausts n theme, but with\njust a word or two be suggests\nmore than a realist can depict in\na page of detail. Tbe great nrtist\nhas a deft, light touch; he pictures\na blue ocean under the changing\ntints of sea and sky. The latter\nimpressionist mixes up a barrel of\nultramarine and lays it upon the\ncanvas with a trowel, a wavo nt\na   time.\nCanadian Literature an Overflow\nThe characteristics I have pointed\nout are not altogether American\ncbnrncleristics They are true in .a\nsense of our Canadian lite rain re as\nWeil. In a sense our Canadian literature is an overflow from the liter-\nature of the I'nited States. We\nhave numbers of authors, rather\nmany than great, but our literature\nis not a distinctly national thing.\nWhy?\nThere nre many reasons which\nmay   have   their   effect.\nIl is not our small population, England had fewer people when Shakespeare and Milton rose like stars above the\nworld.\nIt   may   be   that   the   Canadian\npeople    has    not    sufficiently    re-\n[      alized   itself   to   develop   Into   na-\n|      tional   consciousness.\nannals  in  carefully considered  statements.\nIn poetry we have made a promising start. C.ood poetry has been\nwritten in Canada for the last 40\nyears. If we have not produced a\nworld poet we have still produced\nmany of the minor rank, in whose\nworks we may discern many of Hie\nmarks of greatness.\nReal   Facts\nIsabella Crawford of the 80s is\nthe true mother of Canadian verse,\nbut ahe died neglected, for ahe had\nwon no audience As her career\nclosed a new group arrived, of\nwhom the outstanding figures are\nC. Q. D. Roberta and Bliss Carmen,\nand they for many years have\nmade their homes in the United\nStates though they are as pleased\nto be known as Canadian poets as\nwe are to hestow  the  title.\nThere are others of the group\nwho are associated with the city\nof Ottawa\u2014Wilfred Campbell, Achi-\nbald Lampmnn and D. C. Scott W.\nH. Drunimond, now 12 years dead,\nstruck a really national note with\nhis songs of the French-Canadian\nhabitant.\nOf tlie contemporary poets I select two representative names, Robert \\V. Service and Marjorle Pick-\nthall, the former for a knack of\nmaking poetry sell and the latter\nfor the inverse action. It Is rather\npleasing that the outstanding book\nof war verse was written by a\nCanadian. I refer to Colonel Mc-,\nline's splendid \"In Inlander's Fields,\"\nFiction   Never Falters\nFiction is the literary form that\nseems best able to take care of its\nown in these hurrying days, and\nit is astonishing how many really\nworthless and execrable novels seem\nto find a ready publication and a\nmarket     nowadays.       On    tbe    other\nNELSON WOMAN\nHAS EXTRA RIB,\nX-RAY REVEALS\nble to observe the organs of the\nbody at work, and a table known\naa a buckydlaphram, used ln taking\npictures of the major organs.\nPictures taken in tho X-ray room\nare developed in the complete little laboratory and developing room\nnext door. These negatives are all\neither  14 by  17  or 8 by  10  inches.\nFOSTER^TWEEKLY\nWEATHER BULLETIN\nCamera Room at Hospital!\nIs Full of Interesting\nExhibits\nWASHINGTON. May !\u00bb.\u2014As official\nBlsnce, ht-aded by Dr. Ellsworth Hunt-\nigden of Yale university, a noted\ncholar nnd authority, has, in effect,\nidqrsed   planetary w-'aihor-dngy,  it re-\nllevas me of the necessity of discussing- caums, and I w\u00abl now begin the\nfinishing part of my life work and\nlet the official aoientlsts fight out\ntheir differences as to details. While\nthey are settling those differences I\nwill give to North America better\nlong-range weather forecasts than they\nhave expected.. Of course, the official scientists will give me no credit\nfor having won the long battle of\nplanetary   weatherology.\nJune will the best crop weather\nmonth of the year, but not aa good\nfor outdoor affairs as May.\nWeather for next 10 days: Not\nmuch rain; rather Quiet storms; very\nlow temperatures and poor crop weather west of Rockies crest; moderate\nmoderate temperatures and fair crop\nweather east of that line; section 1,\nhighest temperatures near May 11 and\n27, lowest 14 and 20; section I, highest I\nIS and 19, lowest 16; section 1, Mghest 1\n14 and 19, lowest 10 snd 16; section 4, I\nhighest 16, lowest 10 and 11; section S,\nhighest W, lowest 11 and II; section I,\nhighest 13 and 17, lowest 16 snd ti;\nsection 7, lowest 10 and 19, highest II.\nTwo yeara ago 1 advised most rain\nwould fall on long Southeastern slope*\nbecause the evaporation of sea water*\nwas in that direction. That influence\ndied Out long ago. Till very recently\nI had overlooked a similar but weaker\ncause of evaporation\u2014a new discovery\n\u2014that enables me to see i jflflB\nbetter1 crop weather for 1924 fbr a\nlarge   and   important  section of Nortfc\nPublicity  in  the  \"nth\"  degree  bt*|\ncomes   notoriety.\nDOUKHOBOR HEADS\nSHOW FRACTURES!\nComplete Picture Available\nEight Minules After\nthe Exposure\nFractured limbs. shrapnel- spattered backs, even broken skulls,\nare no novelty to G. E. I^eater, operator of the X-ray machine at the\nKootenay   Lake   (Ieneral   hospital.   He\nId    1\nnle:\nopera- i\nluniight     by1\n1   within   eight I\nblack,     Shin?!\nisgative   of   the\nire   lo   his   a.*-\nband,   it\nis a matter of pride that\nsome men of outstanding\nthis   field     1   shall   mention\nfew:       Itasi]     King,    I.-    M.\nli'\nIt     mav     be\nCl*    lite\nthat\n;il ii re\nanada\n->\u2022:  Hah\n,     .Mure.\nand\nor    not\ngh   to   I\nh\nto\ngre\nminor,    U\\    .\nitbboaa,   Ai:\nur       String,\nthis    work\nre   must    ba*\n*     iis    hope\nn   fiction   do\nlive\nHot\nI an\nanyone\ntrash.\nnot so foolish as to advise\nto read ;ill this modern\nYou   will   read   much   of   it,\nanyhow. 1 make this suggestion:\nOccasionally one should read a\ngood novel. Don't neglect Dickens;\nrend at least one of Thackeray's.\nStevenson is good literary food,\nHy    reading    occasionally    a    good\nok\nhb\nlite\ntests\nfo\n9\ni wholesome liking\nil works that have porta triumphant, sin as\nt have made the world\nhappier place to live\nin, for, in Milfoil's fa in mis phrase,\n\"A good bonk is the precious life\nblood  of  n   master spirit.\"\nbetter\natb.\nIB\nthan\nher  life\nand   blstO\nin\nSo, nowadays, many writers who cannot write turn out volumes of hastily\nwritten mutter for a public that is\nnot   critical.\nHeaders now ask merely if a bonk\nhas a good theory, is it exciting, and,\nabove all, is it novel and unusual.\nWriters do not publish ntily what\nthey think is goml or what ought\nto be good. Their -slogan seems to\nbe, \"Give the public what it wants.\" i\nWhat   the   Public   Wants\nIn his play, \"What the Public j\nWants.\" Arnold IlennoM makes one\nof his characters express this point\nof view in the following words:\n\"I've only got one principle, give\nthe public what it wants. Don't\ngive the public u hat you th.nk it\nought to want or what you think\nia good for it Give it what it actually does want. I argue like this:\nSuppose you went mlo a tobacconist's nnd asked for a packet of\ncigarets, and the tobacconist told\nyou that cigarets are had for you\nand that he could sell you only a\npipe and tobacco, what would you\nsay? Vou see my point, ch'.' I've\ngot no moral a.x.s tn grind. I'm\nJuat a business man. Ynu superior\npeople make me sick. There seems\nlo be a sort of tmtion about that\nbecause it's books I sell 1 might '\"\nbe n cross between (ieneral I'.ooth,\nH. G. Wells arnl the League of Na-\nlons. I'm    a manufacturer      Jugt\nlike   the   fellows    that    sell    snap    and\nflannel,    only   a    blanud    sight    more\nnppr\nterpi\na   distinctive   way.\nIt    may    be    that    ''anada    has\nbeen   swamped   by   the   literature\nof other lands,\nDo you know that Canadian! have\nnever    accorded    such    support    to    a\nCanadian roa-failas as would en-\naide that magazine to become\nworthy of the name',' line American weekly has a larger Canadian\nCirculation than any Canadian periodical. Nearly e\\a ry one of the\nleading American monthlies has a\nlarger Canadian circulation than any\nCanadian monthly has ever enjoyed.\nWhat Americans ar-- thinking about,\nCanadians are thinking about, loo,\nunconscious^. To \u2022 ncuurage a il is\ntinctly Canadian magazine we shall\nhave io be willing to support it.\neven when it isn't worth thc money.\nin order to hasten the time when\nit shall be worth tlie money,\nA   Year's   Books\nLast year nt book week, however.\nwe Canadiana were confronted with\n242 new books of the year. Tie y\nwere divided as fnllnws: Drama, 5;\ncriticism, 0; political essays, li; history. It; fiction, lis, poetry, IM;\nmiscellaneous,   sfn\nll is natural that a new country\nshould be quite undeveloped in the\neon \\nsilion nf dramas. That age\nis to come. |n history we are\ndoing inU, We are just beginning\nto realize that we haven most fascinating history in this country of\nours,   and   authors   are   recording   its\nNELSONLADY\n'SUBLIMATES'\nMOTHER IDEA\nMrs. Cummins, Who Makes\nPaper Dolls in San Francisco, Featured in Call\nondncts   hi\ntion    when\ndoctor   or    nurse,\nminutes     sumbits\nand   nipat   intimat\npatient's   body   str\ntonished    gaze.\nAmong the pictures nn exhibition\nat the hospital tn anyone interested et|ugh to nak Mr. Lester tor a\nview of them, are those nt two fractured jaws, a hone view of a Nelson \\\\|.man who has an additional\nrib, a negative ahowing eight pieces\nof shapnel still in the back of a\nreturned man In September, 1923,\nand one showing b fracture in\nboth the fibia and tibia ol a leg,\nPrize   Picture   Shows   Kidneys\nTt is easy to see that Ihe star\npicture, in I\/ester's eyes is a kidney one, which was only ihe tenth\nbe took 'after the machine was installed. H. R Fredericks, one ol\nthe experts who did tin- installing,\nsaid it was one \u25a0 nf tlie finest pic-\nlures of the sort he had seen, for\nit showed both kldne;\nvery   hard   to   get.\nSeveral Doukhobor\nheen X-rayed, and\nshows n broken chin,\naccidental flying upw;*\nthe other, showing a\nthe skull, canned by\ndental flying downwa\nchain.\nOne X-rny taken nf a hnnd showed\na finger in whicii a fish book had\nheen imbedded for 10 years, with\nno particular discemtnort to Uie\np attest Although tins fish hook\nshowed pfninly in th\u00ab negative it\ncould   not   be   found   by   proo'ng.\nOther,    pictures     -showed     fractured\nms,    a    head    wound    i mis\nby   the   war,   and   several   chests   and\nshoulders.\nA    Picture   a    Day\nThe present average is ?.6 or \"7\npictures a month, Mr. LpsI-t said.\nMiss I lawn 11 nine, uighi supervisor,\nshares   the   X-ray   work.\nThe equipment, wh:<-h -vis presented by Kokanee ehapt.-r, l.i ' U.K.,\nlaat year, consist of the X-ray machine proper, Including a tyotor\nand     transformer,     a     *|i\nWhich ilte use of  which  i*. is posci\nevhieb\none    nasal ive\ncaused by tbe\nrd \u2022>( a chain,\nlarge hole in\nthe    not    RO i-\nt-d    of    another\nhmJkfMsomb\nThat's why Cowan's Maple\nBuds cost more than imitations. You pay for purity\nwhen you buy\nCowans\nCHOCOLATE\nMaple Buds\nGET THE  GENUINE\n^ 5^-tot Co****\nVfy* )ut Maple Buds\nMra,  .V. U. Cummin\", lata of\n\u2022seen .eiiel iieeu- nf Sun Francisco, recently cuiRht tho rye of the? camera\neef tlie. Sun FVtnclica full, .mil the\nres-ill: was a tlirce-eeilnn 'l picture of\nher, littty in her lew avornt'een e,f\nmaking dolls,\nThe   Btory   accocaparyint,'   Un'   .Uns-\ntralinn,     which     li-pie-ls    a     pleiKant-\nf'.e-.i laely exhibiting one o- her pi\nper   dolls,   d\nthus:\nSuhlinialiot\nKreat poems,\ntime\".\nMl ..\n\u25a0el     pi\nl.li.U:\nMr\nlivinc\nAnn\nlitl\nI\n0Mmsf\nr&Z____\u00a33*\nBlue\nRibbon\nSublima\nHas    helpr\nto  earn  h'\nBecause,   ns  a   ;*ery\nn\u00bbit\\ish    Columbia,    Mr-,    i'1\nloved nothing better than I\nIter dulls, and win! is that\nheart of a child thnn motl\n.ii   t: \u25a0\u25a0    budding    \u25a0\u25a0! *\u25a0\u25a0.'\u25a0\u25a0.'\n\"And    T    never    have    stnpp\"d    pi\nin***?   with   dolls,\"   \u00abho   will    tell   you\nlaughingly    today.\nShe points to tlie work table In\nher downtown apartment. That ta'de\nis a Vanity Fair o.' dolls dressed\ndelicately in epepe paper. They are\ntable favors. Some are in pink with\nwee parasols to shield their thina\nties*1\" from the sun. Sotn\" wear\ngreat Ivister lion nets. Some are\ntiny fares lh|t grow* from the heart\nnf   violetr*.   nr   puppies,   nr   roses.\n\"II'h tie- uay I earn mnnev, I nt\nit's just like placing,\" she explains\n\"I had I'ne daught'TS and nlw.iys\ndressed their dolls for tnein. And\nduring the war I ivido pajT floweis\nand taught wounded snldie.'s how In\nmake them. And then I bngnn putting tie- two fege'lior nnd making\ndolls Pressed in paper for table\nfavors.\n\"And then I wanl-'d to make pome\nmoney so 1 put them on tbe market\nAnd they sold. Hut it's still Just\nplay   to   ine.\"\nAmi h11w many are Is happy In\ntheir life work as Mhs. Cummins?\nPaying a Higher Price\nwon't get you better quality.\nInsist on Blue Ribbon\u2014\nthe best at any  price.\nBend 25a to Bio* Ribbon Ltd\nfor the Blue Ribbon < '\u25a0\nwbiU   oilrli.tli\u2014th\u00ab   b*tt   oo<\nivrry day   om in   W\u00abt\u00abra\ntd . Winoipflf. I\nHook bound in I\noook  book lor 1\ni burnn, I\nJAMES COUZEN8\nUnited   Ktates   fienator   for   Michl-\n**\", it (tmM wietuiy ud    \t\n..-*_.-*_-_<___. ....\nSam-Mar Value\nfor your money\nYour grocer now sells this package of Som-Mor biscuit for ten cents. ' Pure, crir^p\nand fresh from the Som-Mor sunshine factory.   There's no finer quality in biscuits.\nAsk for the Striped Package\u2014the sign of Som-Mor quality.\nI       NORTH-WEST BISCUiT,COMPANY, LTD.\n138\nk^^k^m^te\n^U|L^U^\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1924_05_10","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0401544","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}